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Robotic Nurses in Your Lonely Final Years

Deadly Sushi

The One, The Only, Sushi
SUPER Site Supporter
Well Pirate Gal..... time to start looking ay other jobs or become part cyber-chick :biggrin::wink::brows:




Before Toyota made cars, it made robots. It’s making them again, and wants to use them in a most unusual place.
When it was founded in 1926, Toyoda Automatic Loom Works (as it was then known) manufactured automatic fabric looms that could detect problems and shut down automatically. It marketed these revolutionary devices as having “autonomation” — automation with human intelligence.
Now Toyota, looking ahead at the second half of this century, sees a mounting health care crisis and aging population coming to Japan. It sees a future where manufacturing robotic workers is the hot new industry and “autonomation” takes on a whole new meaning.
And the first place we might see these robots is in hospitals.

Japan’s aging population and low birthrate point to a looming shortage of workers, and Japan’s elder care facilities and hospitals are already competing for nurses. This fact has not escaped Toyota, which runs Toyota Memorial Hospital in Toyota City, Japan. Taking a lead from Honda, Toyota in 2004 announced plans to build “Toyota Partner Robots” and begin selling them in 2010 after extensive field trials at Toyota Memorial.
Toyota doesn’t see these machines serving only as nurses. They’re also being designed to provide help around the house and do work at the factory. But it’s the idea of robotic nurses that drew support when Japan’s Machine Industry Memorial Foundation estimated Japan could save 2.1 trillion yen (about $21 billion) in health care costs each year using robots to monitor the nation’s elderly.
This is more than some futuristic fantasy. The government is drafting safety regulations for service robots, which would include nursing droids. A new agency, the Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization, has launched a five-year project to improve safety standards for the machines. The South Korean Government has even drawn up a code of ethics for how robots should treat humans and, perhaps ironically, how humans should treat robots.


Toyota's 'partner robot' makes a little music.



“As aging of the population is a common problem for developed countries, Japan wants to become an advanced country in the area of addressing the aging society with the use of robots,” Motoki Korenaga, a ministry of trade and industry official, told Agence France-Presse.
It isn’t so far-fetched. Japan leads the world in building robots, and the bots show remarkable skill. Honda’s famous android, Asimo, has served tea, conducted the Detroit Symphony Orchestra and freaked-out James May of the BBC program Top Gear. Toyota’s robots have even played the violin and the trumpet.
Of course, there’s a huge difference between waving a conductor’s baton and providing aid and comfort to grandma. But Japan’s biggest automakers are determined to make this work. Honda has spent hundreds of millions of dollars developing its human-like robots, and Toyota has 200 people working on the project full-time. To put that in perspective, it might assign 500 engineers to developing a new car platform. Toyota also is working with at least 10 corporate suppliers and 11 universities.
Toyota’s experience building cars, particularly hybrids, will be invaluable. It makes all of its own motors, batteries and power electronics, and it has worked with electronics giant NEC to develop specialized computer vision processors. All are critical components for robots. And like Honda, Toyota’s robot and autonomous vehicle programs are sharing sensing, mapping and navigation technologies. And the automotive giant has the added advantage of running a hospital where it can test its robo-nurses. Toyota says the first of them could be in service next year, and their descendants could be working on the moon by 2020. Seriously.
Toyota and Honda aren’t going to stop building cars, but both see a big market for robots. Toyota is so bullish on bots, it sees them becoming a core business by 2020 (.pdf). Some may see these machines as a threat to our jobs, if not our safety — particularly if they’re serving as nurses. The last thing people want is T-100 checking their IV drip. But the Japanese seem to be thinking of bots like Astroboy — loyal creations willing to sacrifice themselves to save their humans friends.
Either way, Japan’s biggest automakers are doing what they can to make robots a reality.
Photos: Toyota


Read More http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/01/toyota-sees-robotic-nurses-in-your-lonely-final-years/#ixzz0dIv3GnGR


Read More http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/01/toyota-sees-robotic-nurses-in-your-lonely-final-years/#ixzz0dIv3GnGR
 

pirate_girl

legendary ⚓
GOLD Site Supporter
Oh those koo koo Japanese and their robots.
Blehh.. this'll never happen.
Some things cannot be replaced.
Hrmmmph!
:D
 

REDDOGTWO

Unemployed Veg. Peddler
SUPER Site Supporter
This sounds like it is going to be a problem in the future. Will Arnold have to come back to save us?
 

muleman

Gone But Not Forgotten
GOLD Site Supporter
If they can't make a throttle control device for a car I sure as hell don't want a robot from them doing nursing! I can see it now "robot administers medication to patients ear instead of mouth". Do you really want a robot fitting your catheter??:yum:
 

Lia

Banned
This sounds like it is going to be a problem in the future. Will Arnold have to come back to save us?

I think you could be right REDDOGTWO, about it being a problem, especially for Alzheimer's Sufferers.

Just a thought...
 

muleman

Gone But Not Forgotten
GOLD Site Supporter
Well they may not have the nurses figured out but look for robotic technicians in the not too distant future doing oil changes and other routine service work. PG will be safe for a little while as medicine is a little more inexact than a properly positioned car.
 
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