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SMALL BUSINESS
Can Virtual Worlds Provide Support to Military Amputees?
Amputee Virtual Environment Support Space to Research and Establish Best Practices
Business Wire
Virtual worlds can provide military amputees with an opportunity to
enhance their overall quality of life, expedite their reintegration into
society, and improve their physical and mental wellness. ADL Company
Inc. (ADL) and Virtual Ability, Inc. (VAI) announced today the start of
a project to establish best practices and protocols for the provision of
on-line peer-to-peer support services to this community, with funding
from the Telemedicine and Advanced Technology Research Center (TATRC) of
the US Army Medical Research and Materiel Command (USAMRMC).
“For individuals with disabilities, virtual worlds are a powerful way to
connect with others, to access peer support, and to participate in
activities that might not otherwise be possible,” said Alice Krueger,
President of Virtual Ability, Inc., a not-for-profit corporation. “This
project will establish the best way to adopt this technology for the
unique needs of the military amputee community.”
The Amputee Virtual Environment Support Space (AVESS) project will
research the peer support needs of the military amputee community and
establish protocols and prototypes for addressing those needs in a
virtual environment. AVESS will be developed by ADL and VAI, who are
partners in the project.
“We have successfully used virtual world technology in a number of
areas, including as part of a long-standing project with the US
Government (Joint Medical Executive Skills Institute) through which we
provide leadership training to healthcare professionals in the Tri
Services,” said Doug Thompson of ADL. “This project will further extend
the use and understanding of virtual worlds and establish global best
practices. VAI is an invaluable partner on this project: they have shown
through example and experience how powerful virtual worlds can be in
their ability to support people with all kinds of disabilities –
physical, mental, emotional, and sensory.”
Finding a Sense of Community and Support
Recent US military casualty figures for Operation Iraqi Freedom and
Operation Enduring Freedom indicate that between September 2001 and
mid-January 2009 over a thousand amputation injuries occurred. Of the
935 amputations considered major, one in five wounded warriors lost more
than one limb. While the rehabilitation goal is for the soldier to
return to active duty, many reintegrate into their civilian communities.
In either case, military amputations are often accompanied by additional
wounds, depression, fear, phantom limb pain, and post traumatic stress
disorder.
Spouses and family members often become the caregivers of military
amputees after they are released from military hospitals and
rehabilitation programs. Family support members have their own grieving
process to go through related to the amputation and to the change to
family life.
Peer support groups help recent amputees gain the experience and
confidence and practice the skills necessary to proceed with their
rehabilitation. Support groups can also assist family members and
spouses with their caregiving issues and concerns.
“Individuals come into virtual environments as a way to connect with
others who have disabilities,” said Krueger, whose group has developed
an award-winning support environment in Second Life
® for
individuals with disabilities. “What they discover is that you don’t
just find a community, you find a place where you can express yourself
and feel like you have a shared space. It’s powerful. Virtual worlds
offer an immediacy and a sense of presence that a Web site can’t offer.
Amputees have been shown to respond positively to viewing themselves as
an avatar in a three-dimensional environment.”
“Our mandate is to explore new technology and how it can support service
personnel. This is an exciting project for TATRC because it will let us
define what we see as a potentially effective way to provide another
form of support to military amputees,” said Ashley Fisher, Program
Manager at TATRC.
Linden Lab Provides Technology
The AVESS team selected a stand-alone virtual world solution provided by
Linden Lab as the test platform for the research into best practices.
Based on the same technology that runs the Second Life
®
virtual world, the stand-alone application allows the AVESS team to
prototype a solution that is specifically tailored to the needs of
military amputees and their families, and that has added features for
security and user registration and management.
“We’ve been working with Linden Lab technology to create applications
and environments for commercial, military and educational clients,” said
Doug Thompson. “With a proven virtual world platform that is populated
by hundreds of organizations and thousands of users, it was an ideal fit
for this project.”
About ADL Company, Inc.
ADL Company, Inc. is a leading provider of distance education and
virtual world environments focusing on health, leadership and patient
support. ADL clients include the Joint Medical Executive Skills
Institute, hospitals, HMOs, and industry. An operating division of ADL
owns and operates Metanomics, a weekly broadcast on the serious uses of
virtual worlds filmed in Second Life
® and broadcast to the
Web.
About Virtual Ability, Inc.
Virtual Ability, Inc. is a 501(c)(3) non-profit corporation based in
Denver, Colorado, dedicated to enabling people with a wide range
of disabilities by providing a supporting environment for them to enter
and thrive in on-line virtual worlds like Second Life
®.
For more information on Virtual Ability, Inc., including the benefits of
virtual reality for people with disabilities, please see
www.VirtualAbility.org.
About the Telemedicine and Advanced Technology Research Center
The Telemedicine and Advanced Technology Research Center (TATRC) is the
US Army Medical Research and Materiel Command’s (USAMRMC) corporate or
central laboratory for advanced technology research. Its diverse
assortment of unique collaborative relationships with government,
academia and industry comprise a workforce that focuses on world-class
integrated research and development for the Department of Defense.
TATRC’s research programs consist of seven portfolios and a new
initiatives and basic science program for addressing the ever-changing
world of medical requirements both on the battlefield and in hospitals
of the future.
Photos/Multimedia Gallery Available:
http://www.businesswire.com/cgi-bin/mmg.cgi?eid=6088622&lang=en
Copyright Business Wire 2009
2009-11-02 06:00:00
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