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GVSU Power Mobility Project tests a new device that could give children in wheelchairs greater autonomy.

February 21, 2023

GVSU Power Mobility Project tests a new device that could give children in wheelchairs greater autonomy.

The National Institute of Health and Human Development grant will help provide power mobility training to children and young people, ages 6 months to 26 years old, who aren’t typically considered candidates for that type of training. Lisa Kenyon, professor of physical therapy, said it gives wheelchair users more independence.

“I found throughout my career as a pediatric physical therapist that children who have severe disabilities are not given the opportunities to try power wheelchairs and, therefore, are denied access to their only way to move independently,” Kenyon said.

Kenyon works on the project with John Farris, professor of engineering, and Naomi Aldrich, associate professor of psychology.

Their research found that children with severe disabilities who are unable to self-propel manual wheelchairs do not get an equal chance to learn, develop skills, or explore their world because of their dependence on others. In order to gain some independence through skill-building, Kenyon said, customized wheelchairs need to be converted into power wheelchairs. 

Along with researchers at Flint Rehabilitation in California and the Center of Discovery in New York, the Grand Valley team is testing the IndieTrainer system. 

The system has two parts: the mobility device that temporarily converts a manual wheelchair into a power wheelchair, and simple video-style games developed for children to learn specific power wheelchair skills. These two parts work together to optimize how a child learns to use a wheelchair, Kenyon said. 

“When children can’t move independently, they often become somewhat passive and dependent on others and they have to wait, so to speak, for the world to come to them rather than them being able to act on the world,” she said. “One of the ways that we can try to prevent that is through power wheelchair use.”

The IndieTrainer bridges the gap between manual and power wheelchairs, allowing children to gain a certain amount of independence and, ideally, the skills necessary to operate and qualify through insurance for their own power wheelchairs in the future. 

“Hopefully we will find in our study that this device and system really help children to learn power wheelchair skills and we will be able to go onto a larger-scale trial,” said Kenyon, “Our goal is to help as many children as we can.”

View the original story posted in GVNEXT

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Page last modified February 21, 2023