Comment & Analysis
But a new report from the Institution of Mechanical Engineers sounds a note of caution, spotlighting ethical, regulatory, and practical challenges surrounding the deployment of socially assistive robots (SARs) in home-based settings.
In its report “Automating the Home”, the Institution calls for the robust regulation of home care robots to ensure these technologies are safe, reliable and protect users' rights and privacy.
The NHS has embraced the potential of robots and autonomous systems as part of a wider digital transformation strategy, including its vision for a “neighbourhood health service,” focusing on community-based care.
Fragmented national approach
Despite the NHS’ vision, the national approach to home care robots remains fragmented. The report highlights delays in adult social care reform and continued silence from policymakers on timelines and governance frameworks as hindering the up take in robots for domestic settings.
Professor Helen Meese, the report’s author and former Chair of the Institution’s Biomedical Engineering Division, said:
“As these technologies become increasingly integrated into household routines, they offer significant benefits, such as increased efficiency in performing everyday tasks and greater companionship. However, the demand for SARs in domestic and healthcare settings also raises critical concerns related to safety, privacy, cybersecurity and ethics.
Robots may be ready for our homes — but our policy, ethics, and infrastructure are not.”
This report explores what international standards and regional regulations are presently available for governing the use of robots and autonomous systems in established environments such as manufacturing. It looks at how these regulations might be integrated or adapted for use in healthcare and specifically SARs in the home.
In examining these standards, this report highlights the necessity of balancing innovation with protecting users.
Recommendations
The report’s recommendations include:
Establishing comprehensive safety standards for healthcare and service robots to address risks specific to the home environment, including interactions with children and pets.
Promote ethics and transparent use with guidelines on user consent, transparency in data usage, and measures to prevent over-reliance on robotic assistance.
Focus on patient-centred care by prioritising patient safety and comfort in the design and deployment of SARs, ensuring they enhance rather than hinder patient care.
Enhance cybersecurity and data protection by implementing stringent privacy and security regulation measures for healthcare robots, addressing data encryption, user consent and transparent data handling practices.
The report concludes with a clear call to action for policymakers:
“If the UK is to realise the full benefits of socially assistive robots, it must act now to create the ethical, legal, and infrastructural foundations required for safe and inclusive deployment in our homes.”
The report’s contributors included Prof. Alessandro Di Nuovo from Sheffield Hallam University, Dr Lucie Nield from University of Sheffield, Prof. Massimiliano Zecca from Loughborough University and Prof. Daniele Magistro from Nottingham Trent University.