SINGAPORE – A group of Nanyang Polytechnic (NYP) students has developed an early
prototype of a Windows 8 app to streamline
therapy process for patients suffering dimentia. Called Dementia
Assistance and Recall Engine (DARE), the app functions as a digital scrap book
of sorts, designed to assist therapists in reminiscence therapy.
The application assists therapy
by showing images, video clips and other forms of media relevant to the
patients’ personal life. This according to the goup could trigger patient’s
memories and maintain overall mental health.
The treatment is time consuming,
and requires therapists to understand the patient’s personal history thoroughly
while coordinating the submission of photos and videos from a patient’s family
members.
Furthermore, therapists have to
make qualitative assessments from personal observations during the therapy
process, since there is no quantitative way to measure a patient’s progress.
The group of four students from
NYP – three from the School of IT and one from the School of Health Sciences –
developed DARE to solve some of the problems associated with reminiscence
therapy.
A Windows 8 app with a
touch-based interface lets therapists display photos and videos to the patient.
At the same time, the patient will wear an off-the-shelf headset that measures
his brainwaves.
Through Bluetooth connectivity,
the headset maintains an active link with the app, which then records brain
activity for each displayed photo and video onto a log.
Therapists can review the log
after the session, and plan for future sessions with the information more
effectively. For example, if a photo of a birthday party registered the most
brain activity, the therapist can make a note to show more photos from the same
party in future sessions.
The data is also synced to the
cloud, so it can be accessed from any device by the therapist.
The team also plans to develop a
more full-featured web-based interface for DARE, where family members can
submit more materials and view the therapy progress.
The Alzheimer’s Disease
Association of Singapore has expressed its interest in advancing the project
through clinical trials. Dementia is projected to affect more than 40,000
people in Singapore by 2015.
“Because our trials will involve
human beings, there is a lot of red tape to go through,” said Nur Nadiah Binte
Zailani, a third-year student in occupational therapy. “There is also the
family members of the patients to consider.”
Despite the product being in its
early stages, DARE has won its creators the championship of this year’s Imagine
Cup Singapore, beating 2,700 other students to the top prize.
The team will be heading down to
Sydney in July to pit their idea against 350 other students from 75 countries
at the Imagine Cup worldwide finals.
Source: Techgoondu
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