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Japan
AsiaEast Asia

Japan rest home ‘hires’ babies to cheer up the elderly: ‘the mere sight of them makes our residents smile’

  • The facility in Kitakyushu has signed up dozens of babies to lift the spirits of its more than 100 residents, who are mostly in their 80s
  • Candidates must be under four years old and are accompanied by their guardians at all times. They get paid in diapers and powdered milk

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A 6-month-old baby wears a giant panda costume at a zoo in Tokyo. The nursing home in Kitakyushu has signed up more than 30 babies so far. Photo: Reuters
Agence France-Pressein Tokyo
A nursing home in southern Japan is “hiring” babies for a very important job – to keep its elderly residents company and make them smile. The salary? Nappies and milk formula.

New recruits at the facility in Kitakyushu must be under four years old, and their guardians have to sign a contract stipulating that the babies and toddlers can show up for work “whenever they feel like it”.

They are allowed to take a break “when they feel hungry, sleepy or depending on their mood”, the contract says.

Elderly people stroll through a shopping precinct in Tokyo. Residents of the nursing home in Kitakyushu have greeted the ‘hired’ babies by striking up conversations with them and offering them hugs. Photo: AFP
Elderly people stroll through a shopping precinct in Tokyo. Residents of the nursing home in Kitakyushu have greeted the ‘hired’ babies by striking up conversations with them and offering them hugs. Photo: AFP

More than 30 babies have been signed up so far, tasked with lifting the spirits of more than 100 residents who are mostly in their 80s, said Kimie Gondo, head of the nursing home.

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“The mere sight of babies makes our residents smile,” she said, adding with a chuckle that “there is no shift roster or anything”.

A job advert pinned to the wall at the facility says “We’re hiring!” in large characters and informs would-be workers they will be compensated for their services in diapers and powdered milk.

Successful candidates’ main – and perhaps only – responsibility will be to “take a stroll” around the nursing home while accompanied by their guardians, it says.

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