Rehabilitation Robots for Neurorehabilitation in High-, Low-, and Middle-Income Countries: Current Practice, Barriers, and Future Directions

  • 10h 56m
  • Michelle Jillian Johnson, Rochelle J. Mendonca
  • Elsevier Science and Technology Books, Inc.
  • 2023

Rehabilitation Robots for Neurorehabilitation in High, Low, and Middle Income Countries: Current Practice, Barriers, and Future Directions describes the state-of-art research of stroke rehabilitation using robot systems in selected High Income Countries (HICs) and Low and Middle Income Countries (LMICs), along with potential solutions that enable these technologies to be available to clinicians worldwide, regardless of country and economic status. The book brings together engineers and clinicians, offers insights into healthcare disparities, and highlights potential solutions to facilitate the availability and accessibility of more robot systems to stroke survivors and their clinicians worldwide, regardless of country and economic status.In addition, the book provides examples on how robotic technology is used to bridge rehabilitation gaps in LMICs and describes potential strategies for increasing the expansion of robot-assisted stroke rehabilitation across more LMICs.

  • Provides a global picture of robot-assisted neurorehabilitation
  • Describes stroke healthcare in selected LMICs and selected HICs, along with disparity issues
  • Discusses potential barriers to the penetration of rehabilitation robots into LMICs
  • Presents concrete examples on how clinicians and engineers have begun to address healthcare gaps with rehabilitation robotics and how to deal with accessibility barriers

About the Author

Her research is mainly in robot-mediated neurorehabilitation. She is focused on the investigation and rehabilitation of dysfunction due to aging, neural disease, and neural injury. She is particularly interested in 1) exploring the relationships between brain plasticity and behavioral/motor control changes after robot-assisted interventions; 2) quantifying motor impairment and motor control of the upper limb in real world tasks such as drinking; and 3) defining the methods to maintain therapeutic effectiveness while administering local and remote, robot-mediated interventions. She directs the Rehabilitation Robotics Lab. This is a new Lab within the Department of Physical, Medicine, and Rehabilitation in the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania. The Rehabilitation Robotics Lab mission is to use robotics, rehabilitation, and neuroscience techniques to translate research findings into the development of assistive and therapeutic rehabilitation robots capable of functioning in real-world rehabilitation environments. The goal is to improve the quality of life and function on activities of daily living (ADLs) of our target population in supervised or under-supervised settings.

Rochelle Mendonca, PhD, OTR/L, is an Assistant Professor in the Occupational Therapy Program in the Department of Rehabilitation and Regenerative Medicine at Columbia University, New York, United States. Her research primarily revolves around evaluation of outcomes of assistive technology, accessibility, and participation for individuals diagnosed with disabilities.

In this Book

  • Healthcare Disparities and Access to Rehabilitation Robots for Neurorehabilitation
  • Stroke
  • Rehabilitation Guidelines for Stroke Care: A Worldwide Perspective
  • Fundamentals of Neurorehabilitation
  • Fundamentals of Neurorehabilitation Robotics (Engineering Perspective)
  • Evidence for Rehabilitation and Socially Assistive Robotics
  • North America and Caribbean Region: USA
  • North America and Caribbean Region: Canada
  • Europe Region: Italy
  • Europe Region: Spain
  • Asia-Pacific Region: Japan
  • Asia-Pacific Region: Australia
  • Asia-Pacific Region: Republic of Korea
  • Middle East Region: Israel
  • North America and Caribbean Region: México
  • North America and Caribbean Region: Costa Rica
  • North America and Caribbean Region: Colombia
  • North America and Caribbean Region: Ecuador
  • Europe Region: Serbia
  • Asia Pacific Region: India
  • Asia Pacific Region: Malaysia
  • Asia Pacific Region: China
  • Middle East Region: Iran
  • Middle East Region: Turkey
  • Africa Region: Nigeria
  • Africa Region: Botswana
  • Africa Region: Ghana
  • Africa Region: Cameroon
  • Africa Region: Morocco
  • Psychosocial Dimensions of Robotic Rehabilitation for Stroke Survivors
  • Human-Centered Design for Acceptability and Usability
  • Toward Inclusive Rehabilitation Robots
  • Toward Global Use of Rehabilitation Robots and Future Considerations
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