SmartWheel Overview - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 47
About This Presentation
Title:

SmartWheel Overview

Description:

The SmartWheel measures the characteristics of every push on the handrim ... 49%-73% of wheelchair users have Carpal Tunnel Syndrome. Consequences of Pain and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:99
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 48
Provided by: cn
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: SmartWheel Overview


1
SmartWheel Overview
  • The Data Revolution is here

2
What is the SmartWheel?
  • It provides
  • never before available
  • wheelchair push data
  • for the rehab professional

3
The SmartWheel is a Data Revolution
  • The SmartWheel measures the characteristics of
    every push on the handrim
  • Examples of data provided by the SmartWheel
    include
  • Average force it takes to push a wheelchair
  • Length of each push on the handrim
  • Smoothness of each push
  • Push frequency

4
SmartWheel Data Easy to Gather and Easy to Use
  • The SmartWheel mounts quickly and easily to any
    wheelchair
  • On board memory and Wi-Fi wireless enable data
    collection in the clinic, the hallway or outside
    at the park
  • The SmartWheels Clinical Wizard Software
    provides
  • Auto detection of the start and stop of client
    trials
  • Real-time graphical display of each push
  • MS Word report generation at the push of a button
  • Client database management is automatic

5
The SmartWheel Today
  • There are 58 SmartWheels being used across
    the US, Canada, Europe and Asia
  • The SmartWheel User Group
  • Active advisory group (annual meetings
    quarterly teleconferences)
  • Made up of leading rehab professionals using the
    SmartWheel
  • Produced a standard clinical protocol for
    SmartWheel Usage
  • Created a worldwide database to gather and store
    average push data
  • The Consortium of Spinal Cord Medicine
  • Created a Clinical Practice Guideline entitled
    Preservation of Upper Limb Function Following
    Spinal Cord Injury.
  • The SmartWheel measures all the wheelchair push
    data specified by the clinical guidelines

6
Sample Organizations Using the SmartWheel
  • The Mayo Clinic
  • Schwab Rehabilitation Hospital, Sinai Health
    System
  • University of Illinois at Chicago
  • Craig Hospital
  • Banner Health, Banner Good Samaritan Medical
    Center
  • BES Rehab, the United Kingdom
  • 15 VA Medical Centers
  • Washington University at St. Louis and the
    Enabling Mobility Center
  • Center for Assistive Technology University of
    Pittsburgh Medical Center
  • The Ohio State University Medical Center
  • The University of Miami and The Miami Project
  • Paralyzed Veterans of America
  • Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago
  • Human Engineering Research Laboratories,
    University of Pittsburgh
  • Kessler Medical Rehabilitation Research and
    Education Corporation
  • The University of Washington
  • Rehabilitation Institute of Montreal
  • University College London, Royal National
    Orthopaedic Hospital
  • Vista Medical Europe
  • Memorial Hermann TIRR
  • University of Alberta
  • University of British Columbia
  • Shriners Hospital for Children-Philadelphia
  • Richmond VA
  • Rancho Los Amigos

7
The SmartWheel In-Depth - Part 1Pain and
Injury Prevalence, Consequences, and the
Benefits of Quantitative Push Data
  • The SmartWheels clinical application is
    supported by extensive research
  • All research references that support the
    information provided in the slides that follow
    are available upon request or can be found at
    www.3rivers.com/swpapers.php

8
High Prevalence of Upper Extremity Pain and Injury
  • As much as 75 of wheelchair users develop pain
  • Shoulder, elbow, wrist, and hand are all
    potentially involved
  • Prevelance of pain increases with length of time
    in a wheelchair
  • 65 of those with pain were found to have rotator
    cuff tears or tendinitis.
  • 49-73 of wheelchair users have Carpal Tunnel
    Syndrome.

9
Consequences of Pain and Repetitive Strain
Injury
  • Lifestyle changes
  • Decreased quality of life
  • Functional decline
  • Multiple cost factors
  • Psychological costs
  • Treatment costs
  • New equipment costs

10
Research Evidence of the Sources of Pain and
Injury
  • Evidence Links How Someone Pushes to the onset
    of
  • Wrist Pain Injury
  • Shoulder Pain Injury
  • Research Conclusion Propulsion Style Matters
  • Long, smooth strokes maximize efficiency
    minimize wasted forces
  • Long strokes minimize stroke frequency/cadence
  • Smooth strokes minimize rapid loading (e.g.,
    pounding on the rim)
  • Propulsion style and biomechanics are influenced
    by
  • Training
  • Wheelchair Selection (e.g., heavy vs. ultralight)
  • Wheelchair Set-Up (e.g., axle position)

11
The Importance of Quantitative Data
  • Bolsters funding justification
  • Medical Insurance and Vocational Rehab
  • Provides data to support equipment decisions
  • Client education
  • Feedback to promote training (e.g., push
    technique)
  • Provides visit-to-visit data to track client
    outcomes
  • Database and knowledge base creation

12
The SmartWheel In-Depth Part 2The SmartWheel
Standard Clinical Protocol
13
Standard Protocol for Using the SmartWheel
  • Criteria for the Development of the Protocol
  • Can be completed quickly and easily
  • Data collected is high value
  • Majority of clients would be able to perform
  • Taxing enough to elicit real differences in
    comparisons
  • Protocol enables comparisons
  • Compare push techniques
  • Long strokes vs. short strokes
  • Compare wheelchair configurations
  • Location of axle plate
  • Compare wheelchairs
  • Heavy vs ultralight
  • Adjustable vs. non-adjustable

14
Protocol Tasks and Output
  • Recommended Tasks
  • 10 m on tile
  • 10 m on carpet
  • Ramp (ADA compliant)
  • Figure 8 on tile

15
SmartWheel Central Datapoolas of February 2007
  • Data collected used the standard clinical
    protocol as defined by the SmartWheel User Group
  • So far
  • 128 Unique Individuals 1400 Separate Trials
  • Averages Age (40), Weight (178 lbs), Height
    (510)
  • 70 SCI
  • Key Steady State averages for this population
    are
  • Peak Average Force (newtons) Tile 72
    Carpet 87
  • Velocity (m/s) Tile 1.2 Carpet1.0
  • Push Frequency (Push/sec) Tile 1.1 Carpet1.1

16
Hot Off the Press (soon) . . .
  • Preliminary Outcomes of the SmartWheel Users
    Group Database A Proposed Framework for
    Clinicians to Objectively Evaluation Manual
    Wheelchair Propulsion
  • Rachel Cowan, MS Michael Boninger, MD, Bonita
    Sawatzky, PhD, Brian Mazoyer, PTA, Rory Cooper,
    PhD
  • In press. Archives of Physical Medicine and
    Rehabilitation.

17
Summary of Objectives
  • Describe a standard clinical protocol for the
    objective assessment of manual wheelchair
    propulsion
  • Establish preliminary (reference) wheelchair
    propulsion values for temporal and kinetic
    parameters derived from the SmartWheel standard
    clinical protocol
  • Develop graphical references and a proposed
    application process for use by clinicians for the
    objective assessment of manual wheelchair
    propulsion.
  • Supports CLINICIANS in the evaluation
    determination of necessary interventions
    (treatment, equipment, education) to support
    individuals who propel manual wheelchairs.

18
Why are the Paper Objectives Important?
  • Medicare (CMS) requires clinicians to demonstrate
    why a wheelchair pre-defined by policy is
    insufficient.
  • CMS is only concerned with mobility within the
    home
  • Justifications based on community function are
    rejected
  • Subjective clinical assessments are often
    considered insufficient
  • What CMS will approve often ignores individual
    rehab needs
  • The CMS and evidence-based rehab gap needs to be
    eliminated
  • Quantitative assessment of wheelchair users on
    home surfaces may close the gap between CMS
    policy and actual rehab needs

19
Key Parameter Selection
  • 4 of the 21 SmartWheel parameters were selected
    as most clinically important.
  • velocity
  • average peak force
  • push frequency
  • stroke length
  • Velocity was selected because all users should be
    able to achieve a minimum threshold velocity
  • A velocity of 1.06 m/s is the minimum needed to
    safely cross an intersection
  • Force, push frequency, and stroke length were
    selected based on recommendations from the
    Clinical Practice Guidelines
  • The CPG recommends the minimization of force and
    frequency of repetitive upper limb tasks and use
    of long strokes during propulsion

20
The Importance of Velocity
  • Use of velocity to evaluate the potential of a
    MWU to achieve successful community function is
    not diagnosis specific.
  • Any MWU should be able to achieve a minimal
    velocity for functional purposes, regardless of
    diagnosis.
  • This is consistent with the CMS National Coverage
    Determination (NCD) which bases coverage of power
    and manual mobility on function, independent of
    diagnosis.

21
How does it work in the Clinic?
  • Is velocity above the threshold to safely cross
    the street (1.06 m/s)?
  • If no, clinician designs an intervention to
    achieve threshold velocity
  • Interventions could be strength training,
    propulsion training, alterations of chair set-up
    or use of an ultra-light, adjustable chair.
  • Try to maintain velocity while minimizing force
    and push frequency
  • The ideal is a user propelling above threshold
    velocity at below average force or push frequency
    across all surfaces (Area A).
  • Users pushing with above average force or push
    frequency at below threshold velocity may require
    powered mobility options (Area C).

22
A or B for velocityOnly A for Push Frequency and
Force
23
How does it work in the Clinic?
24
How much improvement?
  • How much of a change in the key parameters is
    important?
  • 0.16 m/s is the difference between a preferred
    walking velocity (1.22 m/s) and the minimum
    needed to safely cross a street (1.06 m/s).
  • Because of this small difference of .16 m/s
    clinicians may argue that a small, consistent
    increase in self-selected velocity is important.
  • The amount of force needed to propel a wheelchair
    is small, highly repetitive, and related to upper
    extremity injury
  • Small reductions in force and/or push frequency
    would cumulatively decrease exposure 2000
    pushes per day
  • Therefore systematic reductions in force or push
    frequency while maintaining a functional velocity
    indicate objective success of an intervention.

25
Conclusions
  • A protocol to evaluate manual wheelchair
    propulsion in the clinic is available
  • A proposed framework and application process for
    clinicians to objectively evaluate manual
    wheelchair propulsion is presented.
  • This method provides a general technique which
    clinicians may be able to use to compare a
    clients propulsion to a larger population
  • And/or to compare a clients propulsion before
    and after an intervention to assess the impact of
    the intervention.

26
Manual Wheelchair Propulsion Measurement
Clinical Applications Case Examples
27
Real-Time Data Viewer
28
Clinical Applications
  • Education for push mechanics
  • Automated Example
  • SmartWheel used as a training device with visual
    feedback to encourage/train optimal push mechanics

29
Braking wheel w/ initiation of each push
30
Education visual feedback
31
Implementation of CPG
  • Implementation of Clinical Practice Guidelines
    Preservation of Upper Limb Function in Spinal
    Cord Injury.
  • The following specific Recommendations from the
    CPG can be specifically applied to wheelchair
    propulsion . . .

32
Implementation of CPG
  • Recommendation 4. Minimize the force required to
    complete upper limb tasks.

33
High Force Propulsion
34
Lowered Forces . . .
35
Implementation of CPG
  • Recommendation 10. Educate the patient to
  • a) use long, smooth strokes that limit high
    impacts on the pushrim and
  • b) allow the hand to drift down naturally,
    keeping it below the pushrim when not in actual
    contact with that part of the wheelchair.

36
Smooth Long Strokes - Observational
Reach back and contact rim
Release rim in full elbow extension
Slide courtesy of University of Pittsburgh
37
Propulsion Education
  • Semicircular pattern
  • Propulsion
  • Recovery

38
Smooth Long Strokes automated
39
Smooth Long Strokes automated
40
Clinical Applications
  • Patient and clinician feedback for manual
    wheelchair selection and configuration
  • Comparative data used to look at one chair vs.
    another or same chair with different set-up (i.e.
    orientation of seat over rear wheel or position
    of rear wheel horizontally).

41
Wheel Position
Wheel Back
Wheel now 2 fwd
42
Wheel Back - original
43
Wheel forward 2 inches
44
Clinical Applications
  • Power mobility justification
  • Objective measurement to determine how well the
    individual can propel manual wheelchair
  • Propel at speed safe to cross street?
  • Able to contact handrim _at_ acceptable angles?
  • (ROM or strength limitations impacting push
    angle)
  • Able to generate adequate force to move chair?

45
Power mobility?
1.3 mph .6 m/s
46
Medicare and the SmartWheel
  • Services provided by the SmartWheel are valuable.
  • There are current Medicare codes, under which
    SmartWheel usage may fit, such as
  • CPT 97542 (Wheelchair management/propulsion)
  • CPT 97750 (Physical performance test or
    measurement)
  • Medicare code usage and development is part of
    the SmartWheels clinical application process.

47
Thank You and Acknowledgements
  • Thank you for your interest in the SmartWheel
  • Thank You to Our Granting Agencies
  • National Center for Medical Rehabilitation
    Research (within NICHD/NIH). SmartWheel
    development was supported by NIH grants
    R41-HD39020-01 R42-HD39020-02.
  • National Institute on Disability and
    Rehabilitation Research (U.S. Dept of Ed.)
  • Paralyzed Veterans of America
  • Thank to Kendra Betz and Rachel Cowan for their
    excellent Clinical Application of the SmartWheel
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com