Daihatsu Launches Demo of Shared Pick-up Service for Nursing Care Facilities
Daihatsu began a two-month demonstration test of a new shared pick-up and drop-off service for elderly care facilities in Toyonaka City, where facilities coordinate rides to improve efficiency.
8
20
185
What Happened
Daihatsu has developed a new business model for its Goissho service, where day care facilities outsource and undertake transportation for one another instead of relying on a single operating body. The operating body acts as an intermediary, using a transportation support system to match requests with available seating, aiming to reduce the burden on organizers and enable sustainable shared services.
8 facilities, 20 vehicles, 185 users
The test runs from July 1 to August 31, 2026, in Toyonaka City, with facilities supporting each other's transportation.
Daihatsu will verify improvements in transportation efficiency and the benefits of inter-facility collaboration, identifying operational considerations and challenges. The company aims to evaluate the feasibility of this initiative as a sustainable shared transportation business model, contributing to resolving regional challenges in welfare and nursing care.
Why this matters
This initiative allows day care facilities to share transportation, potentially reducing operational burdens and making services sustainable in areas with many facilities. It's Japan's first such shared transportation model among care facilities.
Terms in This Story
- Goissho
- A shared pick-up and drop-off service for welfare and nursing care developed by Daihatsu.
- operating body
- The organization that manages the transportation service and coordinates between facilities.
Summarised from the linked release; details can be imperfect — always verify against the original source.