INNOVATION FOR INDEPENDENCE
ISSUE 111 OCTOBER/NOVEMBER 2016 £6.95
Researchers seek older people to test new frame By Dominic Musgrave RESEARCHERS who have developed a special walking frame fitted with sensors as part of a project aimed at reducing the number of falls are looking for a group of older people so they can study their movement in detail.
University’s Schools of Health Sciences and Computing, Science and Engineering, said despite the widespread use of walking aids there is very little published research on how effective they are and what factors might play a role in their use.
The University of Salford team has developed the ‘Smart Walker’ walking frame, which is fitted with motion and force sensors and is used in combination with pressure-sensing insoles in the user’s shoes, to improve understanding of how older people use walking aids.
Their effectiveness may depend on how appropriately they have been prescribed by medical staff, how the individual was trained in their use and how and where they are being used in everyday life.
It monitors how the user transfers their body weight onto the frame as well as the movement of the frame in relation to the user’s foot movements. The team, which has tested the device in the University’s Activities of Daily Living Suite, a facility designed to look like a real-world flat, has also used the Smart Walker in combination with motion analysis cameras to determine the stability of people using their frames. This approach is the first time researchers have considered the user and their four legged walking frame as a combined system for which overall stability is calculated. Dr Sibylle Thies, who leads the team from the
She added: “Until now, there has been no robust method to assess the stability of walking frame users, and no studies have looked closely at the stability of people when using walking frames in their own home or in the street.” Now, the team wants to use the Smart Walker to develop a better understanding of the effectiveness of walking aids and they plan to look in detail at a group of older people who use four-legged ‘pick up frames’ – Zimmer frames without wheels. Over the next year they hope to recruit up to 40 pick-up frame users from Greater Manchester to study them using the device at the University or in their own homes. They will arrange all transport to and from the University – as well as providing lunch, tea and biscuits.
Alan Denver, of Glenavy has become the first patient to be fitted in Ireland with the world’s most technologically advanced microprocessor knee (MPK) – the Genium X3 – created by Ottobock. Due to NHS funding limitations, Alan was not able to be fitted with the prosthesis in his local area and consequently travelled to the Ottobock | IDS clinic in Dublin, a specialist prosthetic and orthotic clinical service, who provide a service to all over Ireland from Cappagh Hospital.