Look out, there's a robot just waiting to take over your job
8. Surgeons
The highly-respected profession of surgeon also faces replacement by robots.
A reduction in post-surgery pain is one remarkable benefit of the robotic surgeons. The machine's arms bend and rotate at greater degrees than a human wrist, which makes its movements more precise and takes pressure off the patient's body.
Robots first carried out surgery in 1993. In 2010, China approved the use of the da Vinci surgical system for operating theatres.
By the end of last year, a total of 3,079 da Vinci robots were operating around the world. China has 28 of them.
On Dec 8, Zhejiang People's Hospital used the da Vinci robot to remove a tumor from a patient from Mali. The robot has four arms and one endoscope system that can move 360 degrees inside a patient's body.
The robot was able to remove all of the malignant tissue around the tumor without destroying healthy tissue.
9. Disaster relief workers
The scene after disasters such as earthquakes, chemical explosions or floods is always dangerous and complicated. The application of robots can reduce casualties among disaster relief workers, regularly injured by falling buildings or poisonous gas releases.
The first 48 hours are the golden time for rescuing victims after a disaster. Designed to lift heavy things and seek out survivors, robots can rescue survivors much faster than humans.
China has already developed a type of robot that can work in fire, water or even after a nuclear explosion. The robot, developed by Shanghai Jiaotong University, is set to be widely used in rescue work.
10. Nurses
Nursing is hard work. With the growth of the aging population in China, nursing workers are in short supply. Robots will be able to relieve people from doing labor- and stress-intensive work.
Siasun Robot & Automation Co in Shenyang, Liaoning province, has developed a nursing machine that can tell jokes, play music, can be depended on to deliver food to a patient punctually, and will do all that is required if there is an emergency.
In the United States, experts are developing a robot that can replace humans to attend Ebola patients so that humans can avoid being infected by the virus.