The Taiwan government started the telemedicine project in remote areas in 1995, including medical consultation and discussion between medical centers and remote medical units [16]. Along with the increasing demand for long term care and to achieve the goals of aging in place, the Industrial Technology Strategy was proposed in 2003, and the Telecare Pilot Project began to be promoted in 2007[16]. Hospitals were commissioned to set up telecare centers to replicate and diffuse services by divided regions. The Taiwan government built two kinds of telecare service models, including home/community-based and institution-based, and provided physiological monitoring, health management, emergency medical resource referrals, health education instruction, and counseling services for chronic cases. The government expected to lead private medical institutions to introduce information and communications technology into the field of medical care to provide relevant telecare services. Moreover, the Taiwan government also built telehealth information platforms to link a variety of health care models, facilitate information interfacing, and to integrate and link health care information to the health care system to provide continuity of care services for the people. In this interdisciplinary cooperation model, hospital organizations, healthcare systems, medical equipment manufacturers, information and communications technology operators, or network service providers formed a telecare eco-system that led to the development of a digital health industry, taking into account both the welfare and social and economic industry demand. Currently, telecare service projects in Taiwan are mainly based on the government grants program. There are few private hospitals through cross industry alliances to provide needed health care services at their own expense [16].