Home Invites Blogs Careers Chat Directories Events Forums Groups Health & Wellness Members News Photos Singles Videos
Home > > Post Content

Using a Robot to Ease a Child’s Pain (924 hits)

Health care workers have a new tool to ease needle anxiety in children: a talking robot. The robot, named MEDi, is programmed to greet a child with a high-five, collect toys from a tray and ask questions like “Do you like movies?” Children who engaged with the robot while receiving a flu shot had much less pain and distress than children who got a shot the usual way, according to a study published in the June issue of Vaccine.

“It’s the first robot to help children manage painful medical procedures,” said Tanya Beran, a professor of community health sciences at the University of Calgary in Alberta and the principal investigator of the study, which was conducted at Alberta Children’s Hospital. Research suggests that children who experience distress in a medical setting at a young age are less likely to access health care in adulthood, so she says it’s important to find ways to reduce pain during pediatric care.

For the study, Dr. Beran and her team recruited 57 boys and girls, ages 4 to 9, who had a moderate to severe fear of needles. Many had chronic medical conditions and had been to the hospital before. And many had vomited, fainted, run out of a clinic or needed to be restrained by nurses or parents when undergoing shots or other medical procedures. ...“The robot was distracting the child during distress, but also giving instruction for how to cope,” said Dr. Beran. “Deep breathing relaxes the deltoid muscle.”

The robot is made by a French company, Aldebaran Robotics, and is sold under the name NAO for about $15,000. The Calgary researchers called theirs MEDi, short for Medicine and Engineering Designing Intelligence. Other research teams have programmed the robot for such applications as elder care, providing reminders to take medications and demonstrating yoga poses; leading a classroom game to teach students multiplication tables; and, in one Milan hospital, serving as a companion to children with diabetes. But as far as pain relief in pediatric patients, “no one in the world has done this before,” said Dr. Beran. “You’re creating a new area of research that people will start to work in.”

Video of Robot http://nyti.ms/13zdNTe

http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/07/09/u...




Posted By: Jen Fad
Wednesday, July 24th 2013 at 6:09PM
You can also click here to view all posts by this author...

Report obscenity
Share |
Please Login To Post Comments...
Email:
Password:

 
More From This Author
They Have Names: These Are The Victims Of The Charleston Church Massacre
Rachel Dolezal: ‘I Definitely Am Not White’ | NBC Nightly News
C N N's Fredricka Whitfield apologizes for calling Dallas gunman 'courageous and brave'
Lack Of Money & Access To Food Makes Cost Of Being Black & Diabetic High
4 Ways Rachel Dolezal Tried To Use Black Hair Styles To Fool The NAACP About Her Race
Bobby Womack, Legendary Soul Singer, Dies At 70
EVA MARCILLE GRANTED FULL CUSTODY OF DAUGHTER AFTER ALLEGED PHYSICAL ALTERCATION WITH KEVIN MCCALL
Marriages… Made in Heaven? Really? #22
Forward This Blog Entry!
Home

(Advertise Here)
New Members
>> more | invite 
Latest Jobs
SGPP Assistant Professor of Practice (Career-Track) 0.5 FTE with University of Arizona | School of Government & Public Policy in TUCSON, AZ.
Coordinator, Program with Front Range Community College in Westminster, CO.
Director of Business & Finance Career Community with Grinnell College in Grinnell, IA.
Faculty, Nursing with Front Range Community College in Westminster, CO.
Faculty, HVAC with Front Range Community College in Fort Collins, CO.
>> more | add
Employer Showcase
>> more | add