Norway faces a growing shortage of health care staff over the next 5 to 10 years, and 2020 will be a crunch point when large numbers of post-World War II baby boomers leave the workforce.
Two employee groups have teamed up to see how robots and other high-tech gadgets can be developed to help care for them.
"Technology will contribute to resolve part of the challenge with employees in the health care sector," Olav Ulleren, head of a group representing Norwegian municipalities, told Reuters. "It could also help people live longer in their own homes."
Ulleren said robots and other devices could do housework like washing clothes and dishes and cleaning the floor.
Equipment to help people look after their health--by, for example, giving daily tests, handling medical surveillance, and taking care of personal hygiene--could also play a role, he said.
Ulleren said the aim of the new technology was not to replace human care and tenderness, but to provide extra help in situations where more health care workers are not available.
"Everyone wants to take care of themselves as long as possible, and it is not the intention to rob anybody of the responsibility of caring for the elderly. This will just add another dimension," Ulleren said. Using technology for household chores would make human health care more personal, he said.
It is, however, far too early to say when the first robots will start caring for elderly Norwegians, the two groups said.
Despite hefty inflows of migrant workers, Norway's 4.6 million population is facing a shortage of skilled workers because of an economic boom fueled by the high price of its oil and gas exports.
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