Robots in home care help elderly and injured navigate daily life as caregiver shortage deepens

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A New Hampshire couple living with traumatic brain injury and dementia found help in Robbie, a Stretch 4 robot that provides meal reminders, exercise guidance, and personal hygiene assistance. As baby boomers turn 80 and the U.S. faces a deepening shortage of home care aides, assistive technology like the $30,000 robot offers a practical solution for independent living.

Robots in Home Care Address Critical Need for Aging Population

After their second service dog passed away, Brenda and Brian Marquis faced a familiar challenge that millions of Americans will soon confront. The Durham, New Hampshire couple needed daily support, but finding reliable home care proved nearly impossible. Their solution came in an unexpected form: Robbie, a wheeled robot that rolls into their living room several times each day to help Brian, 59, who lives with traumatic brain injury and dementia following a 2012 car crash

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. The machine represents a shift in elder care as the oldest baby boomers turn 80 this year and the United States confronts a deepening shortage of home care aides, driven by low wages, high turnover and demanding workloads

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Source: Fortune

Source: Fortune

Stretch Robot Delivers Practical Assistive Technology

Officially called Stretch 4, the robot wasn't what Brenda Marquis initially envisioned when she emailed a University of New Hampshire robotics professor asking about robotic dogs. The wheeled device, which some compare to a coat rack, spends most of its time at a charging station between the kitchen and bedroom

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. When active, it performs essential work: nudging Brian to eat lunch, drink water, and complete his exercise routine. The robot's googly-eyed digital screen morphs into an exercise video that guides him through afternoon workouts. Robbie's programmed care protocol includes meal reminders, medicine prompts, evening routine instructions, and personal hygiene assistance triggered when Brian enters the bathroom

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Manufactured by Hello Robot at their Martinez, California headquarters and sold for nearly $30,000, the Stretch 4 launched in May with capabilities that go beyond simple companionship

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. The typical version includes a telescoping gripper that retrieves water bottles and holds them out for drinking through a straw. It can read prescription bottle labels and uses cameras, onboard sensors, and home-installed sensors to determine its location and identify who's in the room.

Socially Assistive Robots Fill Gap Left by Shortage of Human Caregivers

Momotaz Begum, the University of New Hampshire computer science professor who received Brenda's email, has spent years developing socially assistive robots for people with Alzheimer's and other forms of dementia, funded by the National Institute of Aging

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. Her lab tested various designs with focus groups of older adults at memory care units. While many initially preferred pet-like robots for the elderly, Begum found that appearance matters less than functionality. "The common feedback that we got about Stretch was, 'OK, this one looks like a coat hanger,'" she said. "But what we learned over time is that the look doesn't matter"

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Source: Fast Company

Source: Fast Company

Begum emphasized that she's "trying to reduce that caregiver burden. And the caregiver actually does way more than social companionship"

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. This approach distinguishes Stretch from AI voice assistants like Alexa or tabletop machines like ElliQ, which lack the mobility and functionality needed for comprehensive care support.

Practical Design Prioritizes Function Over Humanoid Expectations

Aaron Edsinger, CEO of Hello Robot and former director of robotics at Google, said the robot's simplicity is intentional. "Our robot's very practical, pragmatic. I think it communicates that," Edsinger explained. "If you show up looking like a humanoid, that expectation's going to be set so high, it's going to be very hard to do"

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. Humanoids remain far from useful in most homes and pose physical danger to people with limited mobility if the robot trips and falls.

For Brenda and Brian Marquis, both 59 and living with physical, cognitive and emotional disabilities, the impact has been transformative. "We've been kind of trapped in a problem here in New Hampshire of being able to find and recruit enough home care support," Brenda said. "That was when I started looking into robotics and trying to figure out what to do"

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. The robot freed her from hours of daily work and reduced expenses. Previously fearful of leaving Brian alone, she was ordering groceries on Instacart. Now she can shop independently while Robbie provides care. "I can go ahead and go to that mahjong game or whatever. Robbie's gonna take care of him," she said

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Source: Seattle Times

Source: Seattle Times

Brian, who admitted he was never into technology, found unexpected freedom through assistive technology. "Then I realized I can't remember to wash my face and my armpits. So, it just really kind of set me free almost," he said

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. While the decades-long quest to build helpful, lifelike home robots remains largely unrealized, machines like those piloted by University of New Hampshire offer a glimpse of emerging possibilities for independent living as demographic pressures mount.

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