Some of the best work being done in robots to help disabled people is from Dr. Amit Goffer of the Technion University in Israel.
ReWalk is a robotic battery-powered exoskeleton with motorized legs and hips that enable paraplegics to walk, turn, and even climb and descend stairs again–and is FDA cleared as of 2014.
And UPnRIDE is a wheeled auto-balancing robotic device that enables quadriplegics to stand and be mobile.
The inventor, Dr. Goffer, is himself paralyzed from the waist down due to an accident 20-years ago.
This has inspired him to create these absolutely amazing robotic devices to assist all disabled people who are wheelchair bound.
Approximately 1% of the people are wheelchair bound that’s 70 million!
And surely, many more especially in the developing world need wheelchairs and don’t have them.
So these amazing robotic devices have the incredible capacity to help so many people stand and regain their mobility and dignity again.
Being able to stand again is not only psychology healthy and helpful for mobility, but it may aid in preventing secondary conditions that wheelchair-bound people can suffer, such as osteoporosis, diabetes, heart disease, loss of lean mass and difficulty with bowel and urinary functions.
ReWalk has also received approval for coverage from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs for those qualifying and with spinal cord injuries.
Hopefully, this is just the beginning for helping people around the world. Mobility is life! 😉
(Source Photo: here with attribution to The Times of Israel)
I love this evolving technology using bionics to help the paralyzed stand and walk again.This technology for exoskeleton suits with motors, sensors, and external power supplies was first developed for the military to run farther, lift more, and so on.However, the application has been expanded to those who have had strokes, accidents, or otherwise have lost use of their limbs and movement.
Additionally, there is potential for industrial workers to use these robotic suits to do their work with less effort and more impact by augmenting their movement with hydraulic and battery power.
What Exso Bionics seems to have really gotten right is that the suit looks almost perfectly sculpted for a human body, appears to go on the person with relative ease, and helps the person move in a balanced and controlled fashion.
While these suits are still pricey and according to Fast Company (April 2002) cost approximately $130,000, Exso is looking get the rates down to between $50,000 and $75,000 retail.
Further, the article notes that other companies are building competing devices, such as Argo Medical of Israel that offers the ability to climb stairs and that activates by gesture without a therapist pressing buttons. Similarly Rex of New Zealand offers a device that is controlled by a simple joystick.
I think the future for these bionic suits for the military and industrial use will be truly transformative in terms of providing superhuman speed, strength, and stamina to advance our capabilities and increase our productivity.
Moreover, the use of these exoskeletons by people who are elderly, frail, or sick is compelling and provides hope for people to live with greater mobility, self-reliance, and human dignity.
This video was sent to me and I do not know the original source (except VW), but it’s great.
It shows what happens when you take the most ordinary daily activity (in this case a simple flight of stairs) and make it user-centric.
Even more, people will walk “the extra mile” when something is appealing to them.
Notice how an unused staircase becomes the preferred method–down and even up–over the escalator when people have a user-centric reason to switch.
This is brilliant and the true essence of what it means to enterprise architect our organizations, products, services, policies, plans, and so forth in a way that people can really use.
Further, technology is not only bits and bytes, but any tool we use to get the job done.
Life truly can be healthy, meaningful, and fun when it’s user-centric, visionary, and innovative.