By Samantha Mason
BLOG—A
medical
Rehabilitation hospital in Columbus Ohio is using the Nintendo
Wii as
Physical Therapy to help patients recover from injuries like
stroke, spinal cord trauma, and damage to the brain.
Finding a console this holiday season will undoubtedly be difficult for
many would-be Wii owners. Some want it to play with their families
while others just want to bowl their hearts out on their own. In the
case of 51-year old Franklin Perry, his desire to score a Wii this
Christmas stems from his recent habitual use—that is, using it to
help recover from a recent stroke.
That’s right, Perry is
one of many patients at the Ohio State University Medical
Center’s Dodd Hall Rehabilitation Hospital that uses the Nintendo
Wii as a form of therapy. According to
an article in Reuters, Perry is utilizing the Wii under hospital supervision to help rebuild muscles in his immobilized right side.
Robbie
Winget, an
Occupational Therapist at Dodd Hall, supervises the use of
the Wii where it has been used for about four months to assist patients
recover from injuries such as strokes, spinal cord trauma, and damage
to the brain. All the patients at Dodd hall apparently play on the
system for about a half-hour each day, two to three times per week.
Winget claims the idea to use the console in therapy came from news
that a rehab facility in Alberta Canada was using the gaming system to
help with patients rehabilitation.
Winget supports use of the
Wii, saying that he believes it can “help patients build balance,
coordination, endurance and upper and lower body strength,” but
maintains that it could not entirely replace conventional therapy.
Instead it is just “one more way to meet specific goals
associated with therapy.”
What about all other consoles?
Well, Winget doesn’t believe they all hold the same therapeutic
value, unfortunately. Not does he not think that other home consoles
could match the appeal of the Wii with older patients, but he also says
that “the idea of sitting there fiddling a couple of button on a
videogame [controller] is not motivating or interesting at all.”
Ouch.
Well Perry, at least, is benefiting from the Wii. Not only does he say
he is just now regaining some movement, he also claims that using the
Wii is “more fun,” “more exciting,” and
motivates him to “work harder.”
Oh, and before you
ask, Winget says that no, Nintendo did not provide the hospitals with
the consoles. It’s all medicine, people. Dig that healing power.
[via
Joystiq]
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