Rehabilitation engineering
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Rehabilitation engineering is the systematic application of engineering sciences to design, develop, adapt, test, evaluate, apply, and distribute technological solutions to problems confronted by individuals with disabilities. These individuals may have experienced brain trauma caused from things such as PTSD, shock, near death experiences, drug induced brain alteration, panic anxiety, or other chemical imbalances. Functional areas addressed through rehabilitation engineering may include mobility, communications, hearing, vision, and cognition, and activities associated with employment, independent living, education, and integration into the community.[1] Improving web access is also a field of interest.[citation needed] A rehabilitation engineer can also be called a rehabilitation engineering technologist.[citation needed]
Qualifications
While some rehabilitation engineers have master's degrees in rehabilitation engineering, usually a subspecialty of Biomedical engineering, most rehabilitation engineers have undergraduate or graduate degrees in biomedical engineering, mechanical engineering, or electrical engineering. A Portuguese university provides an undergraduate degree and a master's degree in Rehabilitation Engineering and Accessibility.,[2][3] Qualification to become a Rehab' Engineer in the UK is possible via a University BSc Honours Degree course such as Health Design & Technology Institute, Coventry University.[4]
Professional registration of NHS Rehab' Engineers is with the Institute of Physics and Engineering in Medicine (IPEM).[5]
The Rehabilitation Engineering and Assistive Technology Society of North America, whose mission is to "improve the potential of people with disabilities to achieve their goals through the use of technology", is one of the main professional societies for rehabilitation engineers.[6]
Supportive devices
The rehabilitation process for people with disabilities often entails the design of assistive devices such as Walking aids intended to promote inclusion of their users into the mainstream of society, commerce, and recreation.
Within the National Health Service of the United Kingdom Rehabilitation Engineers (REs) are commonly involved with assessment and provision of wheelchairs and seating to promote good posture and independent mobility. This includes electrically powered wheelchairs, active user (lightweight) manual wheelchairs, and in more advanced clinics this may include assessments for specialist wheelchair control systems and/or bespoke seating solutions.
The A-SET Mind Controlled Wheelchair has been invented, by Diwakar Vaish, the head of Robotics and Research at A-SET Training and Research Insitutes, India. It is of great importance to patients suffering from Locked-In Sydrome (LIS), it uses neural signals to command the wheelchair. This is the world's first in production neurally controlled wheelchair.
Ongoing research
Rehabilitation Engineering Research Centers conduct research in the rehabilitation engineering, each focusing on one general area or aspect of disability.[7] For example, the Smith-Kettlewell Eye Research Institute conducts research for the blind and visually impaired.[8] Many of the Veterans Administration Rehabilitation Research & Development Centers conduct rehabilitation engineering research.[9]
See also
- Rehabilitation Act of 1973
- Disability Discrimination Act 1995
- Medical engineering
- Prosthetics
- Mind Controlled Wheelchair
References
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- ↑ first cycle of Rehabilitation Engineering and Accessibility (UTAD - Portugal)
- ↑ second cycle of Rehabilitation Engineering and Accessibility (UTAD - Portugal)
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- ↑ [1] Archived January 28, 2010 at the Wayback Machine
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- ↑ http://www.vard.org/cent/centers.htm