http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-12347219

No, robot: Japan's elderly fail to welcome their robot overlords

By Michael Fitzpatrick BBC News, Tokyo

Many of Japan's elderly would prefer human helpers, rather than this nursing
robot called Ri-Man

In Japan robots are friendly helpers not Terminators.

So when they join the workforce, as they do often in factories, they are
sometimes welcomed on their first day with Shinto religious ceremonies.

But whether the sick and elderly will be as welcoming to robot-like tech in
their homes is a question that now vexes a Japanese care industry that is
struggling with a massive manpower shortage.

Automated help in the home and hospitals, believe some, could be the answer.
A rapidly ageing first world is also paying close attention to Japan's
dalliance with automated care.

It wants to know whether it can construct the nursing-care and medical-care
needed in a future with fewer younger people to take care of the elderly.
Japan could show us how.

"The country sees it as an imperative to build carer robots and systems that
can monitor health in the home. Because without them the nation's health
care system won't cope," says carer Yasuko Amahisa.

"There will simply be too many elderly to care for as the nation faces a
dramatic declining birth rate, an ageing population, and loosening of family
ties."

Above all Japan wants, if not needs, its dreams of robots in the home to
come true because its immigration policy is decidedly anti-immigration, she
adds.



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