Rehabilitation Using Community-Based Affordable Robotic Exercise Systems (Rehab CARES)
使用基于社区的经济实惠的机器人运动系统进行康复(Rehab CARES)
基本信息
- 批准号:10675319
- 负责人:
- 金额:$ 71.83万
- 依托单位:
- 依托单位国家:美国
- 项目类别:
- 财政年份:2022
- 资助国家:美国
- 起止时间:2022-09-22 至 2024-08-31
- 项目状态:已结题
- 来源:
- 关键词:AdultAdverse eventAlgorithmsCaringCharacteristicsClinicClinicalClinical TrialsClinical assessmentsCommunitiesComputer softwareControl GroupsDataDiscipline of NursingDockingDoseEquationExerciseFeedbackFinancial compensationFingersFreedomFrequenciesGoalsHandHealthHealth Care CostsHealth InsuranceHealth care facilityHeart RateHospitalsHourImpaired cognitionImpairmentImprove AccessIndividualInfrastructureInsurance CoverageIntelligenceInterventionLeadLower ExtremityMonitorMotivationMotorMovementMuscleOccupational TherapyPatient-Focused OutcomesPatientsPerformancePersonsPhasePhysical therapyPlayPlay TherapyPopulationPositioning AttributeQuality of CareRandomizedRehabilitation CentersRehabilitation therapyResource-limited settingResourcesRobotRoboticsRuralSafetySocioeconomic StatusSpeech TherapyStrokeSystemTechnologyTestingTherapeuticTimeUpper Extremityarmbasecare deliverycare seekingclinical predictorscloud basedcohortcommunity based carecostcost effectivedesigndisabilityexercise rehabilitationexperiencefollow up assessmentforce feedbackfunctional outcomeshapticshealth care disparityimprovedimproved functioningindividualized medicineinnovative technologiesinstrumentkinematicsmotor controlmotor impairmentmultidisciplinaryneurological rehabilitationnovelpost strokerecruitrehabilitation technologyrehabilitative carerobot assistancerobot controlrobot rehabilitationsafety and feasibilitysafety testingsensorstroke patientstroke survivorstroke therapysuccesstargeted treatmenttreatment durationusability
项目摘要
PROJECT SUMMARY
Stroke is the leading cause of serious long-term disability. It is estimated that 5.8–6.5 million people currently
live with stroke related disability in the US and that this number will increase by 20.5% by 2030. The current US
health infrastructure is not prepared for these increasing numbers. Limitations in health insurance coverage and
the shortage of rehabilitation practitioners decrease access to rehabilitation. Community-based settings are
becoming viable venues for delivering long-term post-stroke care, however, they are plagued by staff with limited
expertise, low number of therapists and lack of financial resources for rehabilitation. Because of this, the quality
of care is compromised, and functional outcomes of patients are not equal to hospital-based rehabilitation
settings. We seek to develop a novel solution to this problem. Implementing affordable design is a fundamental
strategy for increasing access to rehabilitation technology for patients regardless of socio-economic status.
Doing so, decreases healthcare disparities and reduces long-term healthcare costs. We propose to use
affordable robots to improve access to quality rehabilitation care in low-resource, community-based settings. In
Phase 1, we leverage a 1 degree of freedom haptic robot with control algorithms to develop a beta version of
the robot hardware and software. The new robot have a novel end-effector to allow more diverse arm and hand
exercises, be connected to cloud-based gaming, and provide patient-specific therapy that adjusts for motor
impairment and cognitive impairment. 15 stroke patients with a wide range of motor impairment levels will
complete clinical assessments of motor and cognitive impairment followed by robot-based assessment and
therapy games. Subjects will be instrumented with sensors monitoring key upper extremity muscle activity, trunk
activity and heart rate during robot tasks. A key milestone will be to identify kinematic metrics from the robot
tasks that strongly correlate and predict clinical scores of motor and cognitive impairment. Another milestone will
to drive patient-specific strategies by adjusting the robot’s control parameters and the game parameters. In
Phase 2, we will develop the hardware to allow three haptic robots to dock (a gym) and be configured to allow
patients to play therapy games alone or collaboratively. We will test the safety and feasibility of the gym in a
community-based rehabilitation setting where stroke patients typically receive 1 hour each of physical therapy
(PT), occupational therapy (OT) and speech therapy (SLP). 36 patients will be randomized to either a robot (RT)
or a control group (CT). Both groups will receive PT and SLP, but the RT will receive the robot gym therapy
targeting the upper limb and the CT will receive a dose-matched hour of OT. Therapy will occur over 4 weeks
with two follow-up assessments. Key milestones will be to show that the RT has the same or better functional
outcomes, motivation, and adverse events as the CT. Also, to show that the robot gym is a cost-effective solution
to increasing access to quality rehabilitation care in low-resource, community-based settings. Success here will
validate this potential solution, justify design changes revealed via user-feedback and a larger clinical trial.
项目摘要
中风是导致严重长期残疾的主要原因。据估计,目前有580万至650万人
在美国,患有中风相关残疾的人数将增加,到2030年,这一数字将增加20.5%。当前美国
卫生基础设施没有为这些不断增加的人数做好准备。健康保险覆盖面的局限性,
康复从业人员的短缺减少了获得康复服务的机会。基于社区的设置是
成为提供长期中风后护理的可行场所,然而,他们受到工作人员的困扰,
在这方面,残疾人问题仍然存在,包括缺乏专业知识、治疗师人数少以及缺乏康复资金。因此,质量
护理受到损害,患者的功能结果不等于医院康复
设置.我们寻求开发一种新的解决方案来解决这个问题。实施经济实惠的设计是
提高患者获得康复技术的机会的战略,不论其社会经济地位如何。
这样做可以减少医疗差距,降低长期医疗成本。我们建议使用
负担得起的机器人,以改善在低资源,社区为基础的设置获得高质量的康复护理。在
第一阶段,我们利用1度自由触觉机器人与控制算法开发的测试版
机器人硬件和软件。新机器人有一个新颖的末端执行器,可以实现更多样化的手臂和手
运动,连接到基于云的游戏,并提供针对患者的治疗,
损伤和认知损伤。15名运动障碍程度不同的中风患者将
完成运动和认知障碍的临床评估,然后进行基于机器人的评估,
治疗游戏受试者将配备传感器,监测关键上肢肌肉活动、躯干
机器人任务期间的活动和心率。一个关键的里程碑将是确定机器人的运动学指标
这些任务与运动和认知障碍的临床评分密切相关并可预测临床评分。另一个里程碑将
通过调整机器人的控制参数和游戏参数来驱动患者特定的策略。在
第二阶段,我们将开发硬件,让三个触觉机器人对接(健身房),并配置为允许
患者可以单独或合作玩治疗游戏。我们将测试健身房的安全性和可行性,
基于社区的康复环境,中风患者通常接受每次1小时的物理治疗
(PT)、作业疗法(OT)和言语疗法(SLP)。36名患者将被随机分配至机器人(RT)
或对照组(CT)。两组都将接受PT和SLP,但RT将接受机器人健身房治疗
瞄准上肢和CT将接受剂量匹配的OT小时。治疗将持续4周
两次后续评估。关键里程碑将是表明RT具有相同或更好的功能
结果、动机和不良事件作为CT。此外,为了表明机器人健身房是一个具有成本效益的解决方案,
在资源匮乏的社区环境中增加获得高质量康复护理的机会。成功将
验证这种潜在的解决方案,通过用户反馈和更大规模的临床试验证明设计变更的合理性。
项目成果
期刊论文数量(0)
专著数量(0)
科研奖励数量(0)
会议论文数量(0)
专利数量(0)
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MICHELLE J. JOHNSON其他文献
MICHELLE J. JOHNSON的其他文献
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{{ truncateString('MICHELLE J. JOHNSON', 18)}}的其他基金
CT imaging-based prediction and stratification of motor and cognitive behavior after stroke for targeted game-based robot therapy: Diversity Supplement
基于 CT 成像的中风后运动和认知行为的预测和分层,用于基于游戏的有针对性的机器人治疗:多样性补充
- 批准号:
10765218 - 财政年份:2023
- 资助金额:
$ 71.83万 - 项目类别:
Affordable Robot-Based Assessment of Cognitive and Motor Impairment in People Living with HIV and HIV-Stroke
经济实惠的基于机器人的艾滋病毒感染者和艾滋病毒中风患者认知和运动障碍评估
- 批准号:
10751316 - 财政年份:2023
- 资助金额:
$ 71.83万 - 项目类别:
Rehabilitation Using Community-Based Affordable Robotic Exercise Systems (Rehab CARES)
使用基于社区的经济实惠的机器人运动系统进行康复(Rehab CARES)
- 批准号:
10709654 - 财政年份:2022
- 资助金额:
$ 71.83万 - 项目类别:
Rehabilitation Using Community-Based Affordable Robotic Exercise Systems (Rehab CARES)
使用基于社区的经济实惠的机器人运动系统进行康复(Rehab CARES)
- 批准号:
10923752 - 财政年份:2022
- 资助金额:
$ 71.83万 - 项目类别:
Rehabilitation Using Community-Based Affordable Robotic Exercise Systems (Rehab CARES)
使用基于社区的经济实惠的机器人运动系统进行康复(Rehab CARES)
- 批准号:
10256401 - 财政年份:2021
- 资助金额:
$ 71.83万 - 项目类别:
Towards Objective Metrics to Quantify the Role of HIV and Increasing Cognitive Demand on Instrumental ADLs in People Aging with HIV
制定客观指标来量化艾滋病毒的作用以及艾滋病毒感染者对工具性 ADL 认知需求的增加
- 批准号:
10468937 - 财政年份:2021
- 资助金额:
$ 71.83万 - 项目类别:
Towards Objective Metrics to Quantify the Role of HIV and Increasing Cognitive Demand on Instrumental ADLs in People Aging with HIV
制定客观指标来量化艾滋病毒的作用以及艾滋病毒感染者对工具性 ADL 认知需求的增加
- 批准号:
10327136 - 财政年份:2021
- 资助金额:
$ 71.83万 - 项目类别:
Automated Assessment of Neurodevelopment in Infants at Risk for Motor Disability
自动评估有运动障碍风险的婴儿的神经发育
- 批准号:
9765496 - 财政年份:2019
- 资助金额:
$ 71.83万 - 项目类别:
Automated Assessment of Neurodevelopment in Infants at Risk for Motor Disability
自动评估有运动障碍风险的婴儿的神经发育
- 批准号:
10620100 - 财政年份:2019
- 资助金额:
$ 71.83万 - 项目类别:
SmarToyGym: Smart detection of atypical toy-oriented actions in at-risk infants
SmarToyGym:智能检测高危婴儿的非典型玩具导向行为
- 批准号:
9127310 - 财政年份:2015
- 资助金额:
$ 71.83万 - 项目类别:
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