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Elderly homes turn to new software to ease burden on workers
Elderly homes turn to new software to ease burden on workers

NHK

time15 hours ago

  • Business
  • NHK

Elderly homes turn to new software to ease burden on workers

Japan's elderly care sector is grappling with a severe shortage of workers. As the job recruitment campaigns ramp up, one home operator is automating technology in the back office to help ease the strain on staff. Sompo Care runs 450 facilities across Japan. A common complaint from its employees is that administrative tasks take up too much time -- distracting them from their main job of caring for the elderly. This month, the operator introduced new software to handle the paperwork -- starting with staff rosters. Employees submit desired times and days off via their smartphones. The system then takes over and automatically creates the shift schedule. Managers report that a job that used to take 10 hours a month can now be done in minutes. That allows workers to focus on caring for residents. Saito Shota, care home director, says: "Creating shift rosters used to take up a lot of our time. Now it's possible to spend that time on staff and residents." Major trading house Sumitomo Corporation developed the software service. It aims to introduce it to about 30 percent of nursing facilities across the country.

First batch of Indian caregivers head to Japan amid worker shortage woes
First batch of Indian caregivers head to Japan amid worker shortage woes

Business Standard

time18-06-2025

  • Business
  • Business Standard

First batch of Indian caregivers head to Japan amid worker shortage woes

The first group of Indian nursing care workers trained by a subsidiary of Japan's Sompo Holdings is set to begin work in Japan next month, Nikkei Asia reported on Wednesday. The initiative is the result of a training partnership between Sompo Care and India's National Skill Development Corporation (NSDC) that helps address Japan's labour shortages and ageing population. In August last year, Sompo Care launched a specialised training centre near New Delhi. The centre offers a nine-month programme that includes Japanese language instruction and practical training using care equipment imported from Japan. The initiative aims to train and deploy 100 Indian caregivers annually, with the objective of hiring 1,000 workers by 2040. In April, the first nine trainees graduated from the programme. Eight passed Japan's 'specified skills' test, qualifying them for residency and employment. They are expected to begin work at care facilities in Japan as early as July. Sompo Care has ensured that the Indian recruits will be paid on par with their Japanese colleagues, adding that those who excel may be promoted to management roles. Sompo Care, which previously hired from Southeast Asia, is now shifting focus to India due to growing competition for talent in the region. India's younger, more abundant workforce—and its high youth unemployment—makes it a promising source for overseas recruitment. Japan: Ageing population, shrinking workforce As Japan grapples with an ageing population and a shrinking workforce, projections suggest a shortfall of around 570,000 nursing care workers by 2040. Japan's ageing population is straining its labour market, forcing reforms to retirement norms. In 2013, Japan amended the Act on Stabilisation of Employment of Elderly Persons (ASEEP), making companies to offer employment until age 65, through raised retirement age, rehiring, or continuous-employment schemes. They are also encouraged to extend opportunities up to age 70. A 2023 survey by the labour ministry found that 42 per cent of companies allow staff to work until 70 or beyond, more than double the percentage from ten years earlier. In 2024, 5.4 million people aged 70 or older were still employed, a 70 per cent increase since 2014. Labour shortages are especially severe in sectors like nursing care and construction, where older workers make up a growing share of the workforce. People aged 65 and above now account for 14 per cent of all workers in Japan, and up to 17 per cent in the hardest-hit industries.

Indian nursing care workers trained by Sompo head to Japan
Indian nursing care workers trained by Sompo head to Japan

Nikkei Asia

time17-06-2025

  • Business
  • Nikkei Asia

Indian nursing care workers trained by Sompo head to Japan

MUMBAI -- The first group of Indian nursing care workers trained by a unit of Japanese insurer Sompo Holdings will head to Japan in July, providing relief to an industry hammered by a worsening labor crunch. Sompo Care opened a training center near New Delhi last August in cooperation with India's National Skill Development Corp. Nursing care equipment was brought in from Japan for the nine-month training program, which also includes Japanese language lessons.

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