Times Colonist

Robotic grabber assists children with special needs

- RICHARD WATTS rwatts@timescolon­ist.com • To see the CanAssist devices in action, go to canassist.ca/EN/cdc/.

Four-year-old Ethan Shannon shows Children and Family Developmen­t Minister Katrine Conroy how he uses a robotic grabber to pick up things from his electric wheelchair. The minister joined CanAssist staff at the University of Victoria to see how children with special needs use seven new assistive technologi­es that have been delivered to child developmen­t centres in B.C.

Four-year-old Ethan Shannon uses a specialize­d electric wheelchair to get around, but when it come to play time, a robotic grabber allows him to pick up or retrieve a favourite toy.

“It makes a huge difference whenever he needs assistance to have a little independen­ce,” May Shannon said of her son, who has nemaline myopathy, a neuromuscu­lar disorder that affects muscle tone and strength.

The Shannon family was at the University of Victoria on Friday to help demonstrat­e seven new technologi­es, devices, toys and games created for child-developmen­t centres with $1.5 million from the B.C. government.

Katrine Conroy, minister of children and family developmen­t and a former earlychild­hood educator, was thrilled by the demonstrat­ions.

“It shows what a difference we can make for kids with special needs,” she said. “It’s really heart-warming and nice to see.”

The devices are the work of CanAssist, a UVic organizati­on that harnesses the ingenuity and expertise at the university to assist people with their unique special needs.

They include a gaming controller for children with limited hand function, a ball launcher for kids who can’t throw on their own, an app that allows kids to communicat­e by pointing to pictures on a tablet, and a remote-control car that can be operated by kids with limited dexterity.

The devices were developed with the assistance of the B.C. Associatio­n for Childhood Developmen­t and Interventi­on and staff members from 32 child-developmen­t centres around the province.

Participat­ing child-developmen­t centres will have received five of the new devices by the end of this month.

The remaining two will be shipped in early 2019.

CanAssist began in 1999 with one professor reaching out to colleagues for help to specialize some devices for his daughter. It has now developed 2,698 software apps and 329 devices.

These include a device to allow a nearparaly­zed man to throw balls from an electric wheelchair to play fetch with his two dogs, and a home intercom system that allows caregivers to communicat­e via telephone with a person with dementia.

 ?? ADRIAN LAM, TIMES COLONIST ??
ADRIAN LAM, TIMES COLONIST

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