Applied Sciences (Feb 2022)

Making Best Use of Home-Based Rehabilitation Robots

  • Justin F. Gallagher,
  • Manoj Sivan,
  • Martin Levesley

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/app12041996
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 4
p. 1996

Abstract

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Large-scale clinical trials have shown that rehabilitation robots are as affective as conventional therapy, but the cost-effectiveness is preventing their uptake. This study investigated whether a low-cost rehabilitation robot could be deployed in a home setting for rehabilitation of people recovering from stroke (n = 16) and whether clinical outcome measures correlated well with kinematic measures gathered by the robot. The results support the feasibility of patients independently using the robot with improvement in both clinical measures and kinematic data. We recommend using kinematic data early in an intervention to detect improvement while using a robotic device. The kinematic measures in the assessment task (hits/minute and normalised jerk) adequately pick up changes within a four-week period, thus allowing the rehabilitation regime to be adapted to suit the user’s needs. Estimating the long-term clinical benefit must be explored in future research.

Keywords