Authors of an article published in BMJ Open Sport Exercise Medicine say the technology could help with rehab therapies, with social distancing.
Virtual reality
could be key to COVID-19 rehabilitation, according to a new paper published in
BMJ Open Sport Exercise Medicine. Specifically, the authors of the publication
pitch tailor-made rehabilitation services that can be administered remotely via
a VR experience.
The authors explain
that many COVID-19 patients who were critically ill continue to have
Post-Intensive Care Syndrome, even after the infection is gone, leaving a
potential risk for physical, psychological and cognitive impairment.
“Traditional PICS
treatments also do not account for the additional emotional and societal
side-effects of this particular crisis, such as social distancing, limitation
of family members’ visits and consultations by primary caregivers when patients
are discharged,” authors of the study wrote. “VR provides healthcare
practitioners with the means to administer fast, temporary and tailor-made
rehabilitation services at a distance, and offers a solution to address the
impending surge of demand for PICS-COV therapy.”
VR could help
patients not just with physical rehab but could also help with psychological
support for patients who have overcome COVID-19.
Authors noted that
the technology is well suited to today’s environment as it lets therapy be
delivered at a distance and allows therapists, who may be in high demand, to
treat patients simultaneously. VR differs from traditional telemedicine, the
paper says, because of its ability to put patients into a 3D environment.
However, VR also
presents new sets of challenges, according to the article. Those challenges
include creating a new toolkit for physical, mental and cognitive therapy. The
risk of falls is another potential issue in the technology. Authors of the
paper suggested that patients should sit when doing cognitive and mental
health-related therapy. Proper patient education was also suggested.
WHY IT MATTERS
According to a
paper published in Heart Lung, 50% of all patients admitted to the ICU that go
onto a ventilator develop PICS. The paper goes on to note that there is no
difference in PICS risk between ICU patients with morbidities such as diabetes,
hypertension, asthma, and chronic obstructive pulmonary and those admitted to
the ICU who do not have a morbidity.
THE LARGER TREND
Virtual reality is
growing in popularity in the healthcare space. In Italy one hospital is supplying
VR therapy to its workers to help reduce the stress and anxiety associated with
treated coronavirus patients.
Virtual reality is
also growing in the rehabilitation space, in stroke care in particular. In
February a use-of-concept study found that stroke patients given virtual
reality therapy were consistent in completing the therapy, and preferred a
version that let them connect to others.
In 2018, a
rehabilitation research group from the Kessler Foundation and immersive
interactive technologies company Virtualware announced the two organizations
are teaming up to develop a VR-based treatment for spatial neglect in stroke
patients.