Augmented reality glasses as a new tele-rehabilitation tool for home use: patients' perception and expectations.
Jose Cerdan de Las HerasM TulppoA M KiviniemiO HilbergA LøkkeS EkholmDaniel Catalán-MatamorosElizabeth BendstrupPublished in: Disability and rehabilitation. Assistive technology (2020)
Patients with chronic heart or lung diseases described the added value in an ARG telerehabilitation programme. Improvements for a future version of the ARG were suggested.IMPLICATIONS FOR REHABILITATIONPatients with chronic pulmonary and heart diseases have difficulties to change behaviour to a more active and healthy lifestyle, offers from the health sector to participate in rehabilitation programmes at the hospital are feasible and improves quality of life and exercise capacity. Not all the patients are capable of participating in such rehabilitation programmes due to frailty and long distance to the hospital. Telerehabilitation seems to be a potential treatment to cope with the needs expressed above.Patient involvement in the development of a telerehabilitation solution to empower chronic pulmonary and heart patients to train, ensures a positive contribution to the design of the expected augmented reality software and hardware envisioned solution for telerehabilitation.The development of a user-centered telerehabilitation platform responding to the preferences of patients with chronic disease will remove barriers that limit use and compliance and improve empowerment in future research projects.
Keyphrases
- end stage renal disease
- ejection fraction
- healthcare
- chronic kidney disease
- heart failure
- peritoneal dialysis
- pulmonary hypertension
- prognostic factors
- type diabetes
- atrial fibrillation
- weight loss
- metabolic syndrome
- mental health
- patient reported outcomes
- human health
- climate change
- risk assessment
- high throughput
- mass spectrometry
- drug induced
- quality improvement
- patient reported