TIANJIN, CHINA -
Media OutReach Newswire
- 29 June 2026 - A smart elderly care enterprise branded Time Light
Care, based in north China's Tianjin, has developed a proprietary smart
elderly care management platform, drawing on Taiwan's long-term care
experience and riding the momentum of the mainland's silver economy.
The nursing homes, positioned as "community-embedded, small-to-medium
scale, high-quality care" facilities, allow the elderly to stay in
familiar surroundings while remaining close to family members.
On the technology front, the company has introduced millimeter-wave
radar monitors for completely bedridden residents to track breathing,
pulse, and heartbeat in real time, with automatic alerts sent to
caregivers' phones in case of any abnormality.
The company has also introduced accessible vehicles equipped with
detachable automatic wheelchairs that go directly to the bedside,
helping "suspended seniors"—those who struggle to go downstairs due to
the lack of elevators—to go out with dignity.
These industry efforts come as China's elderly population aged 60 and
above reached 320 million by the end of 2025, a figure projected to
exceed 400 million by 2035, with the silver economy expected to surpass
30 trillion yuan (about 4.41 trillion U.S. dollars).
In February 2026, an executive meeting of the State Council proposed to
promote the expansion and quality improvement of inclusive elderly care
service supply, improving a tiered, categorized, inclusive, accessible,
urban-rural covering, and sustainable elderly care service system. The
series of measures outlined at the meeting charted the direction and
identified priorities for better meeting the diverse and multi-level
needs of hundreds of millions of elderly people.
"The mainland's policy support and market scale have created immense
opportunities for innovation in senior care," said Jing Ran, the
company's representative, during an exclusive interview with China News
Service. "Having succeeded in starting our business here, we now hope to
encourage more young people from Taiwan to come, explore, and develop
their careers on the mainland."