A Japanese city has introduced a
novel way to keep track of senior citizens with dementia who are prone to
getting lost – tagging their fingers and toes with scanable barcodes. A company
in Iruma, north of Tokyo, has developed tiny nail stickers, each of which
carries a unique identity number to help concerned families find missing loved
ones, according to the city’s social welfare office. The adhesive QR-coded seals for nails – part of
a free service launched this month and a first in Japan – measure just one centimeter
(0.4 inches) in size. Being able to attach the seals on nails is a great
advantage. There are already ID stickers for clothes or shoes but dementia
patients are not always wearing those items. If an elderly person becomes
disoriented, police will find the local city hall, its telephone number and the
wearer’s ID all embedded in the QR code. The chips remain attached for an
average of two weeks- even if they get wet – the official said, citing recent
trials. Japan is grappling with a rapidly ageing population. Senior citizens
expected to make up 40% of the population around 2060. Last month, Japanese
police started offering noodle discounts at local restaurants to elderly
citizens who agreed to hand in their driving licenses. The offer followed a
series of deadly accidents involving elderly drivers – a growing problem in a
country where 4.8 million people aged 75 of older hold a license.
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