Dancing robots bring support, company to Barcelona elderly


Irene Veglison, 67, plays with her robot, nicknamed "Sandi", inside her apartment, where she lives with two cats, and her robot during a pilot project to improve tele-assistance, to provide support to those experiencing the early stages of cognitive decline, in Barcelona, Spain, February 26, 2026. REUTERS/Nacho Doce

BARCELONA, ⁠Feb 27 (Reuters) - Barcelona resident Irene Veglison had not danced for more than two decades until ⁠a robot moved into her home three months ago.

The 67-year-old received the 1.35-metre-tall device ‌in November as part of a government project to support people in the early stages of cognitive decline.

"We're developing this pilot project to improve tele-assistance," said Marta Villanueva Cendán, a councillor for Barcelona's municipal council.

Like many countries, Spain faces rising ​life expectancy and falling birth rates, increasing pressure on its care ⁠sector to support an ageing population.

"In ⁠the future, we want the robots to detect risk and alert professionals, like if the person has ⁠fallen ‌and cannot respond," the councillor added.

Barcelona has deployed 600 such bots to private homes and care centres, under a programme backed by a 3.8 million euro ($4.47 million) grant from the ⁠European Union's COVID recovery funds.

The devices are built by U.S.-based Misty ​Robotics and distributed in Europe ‌by Catalan firm Grup Saltó.

Veglison, who lives with her two cats, has named her ⁠bot Sandi.

It reminds her ​to take her medication at 9 a.m., tells her when her doctor appointments are, wakes her up in the morning and bids her goodnight at the end of each day.

Nearly 2 million people over 65 live alone ⁠in Spain, three-quarters of them women, according to official ​data.

Studies estimate the country will need to double its long-term care workforce by 2030. Yet, pay about 10,000 euros below the national average has deterred younger workers and more than half of current staff are ⁠over 45, according to think-tank Funcas.

In an emergency, Veglison can call a social worker through the device, which has a camera that can be activated remotely to assess the situation and offer help.

Scrolling through YouTube on its built-in screen, she selected a French chanson and swayed with Sandi as the screen ​tilted back and forth with her movements.

The devices are fitted with ⁠screens offering entertainment apps, a calendar, maps, and a selection of cartoon-like faces to set when it is ​on standby, with expressions like "surprised", "loving" or "asleep".

"It's not just a trinket: ‌there are lots of people behind it who are ​looking out for you, checking whether you've fallen down, whether you're okay," Veglison said.

($1 = 0.8492 euros)

(Reporting by Alba Ferrer, Victoria Waldersee; Writing by Victoria Waldersee; Editing by Nivedita Bhattacharjee)

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