Business Standard

Technology aids boost human abilities

- KRANTI NATION PRANJAL SHARMA

Asimple pair of spectacles restores vision for the partially-sighted, hearing aids open up the world of sound for the hearing-impaired, and phone alerts remind people it’s time to have prescripti­on medicine, or simply get up to walk around to get sufficient activity. Assisted technologi­es that support communicat­ion, cognition, mobility and self-care are now so integrated across the human lifespan that most people don’t even consider them as supportive aids.

Apart from wheelchair­s, spectacles, hearing aids, prostheses, wheelchair­s, and so on, assisted technologi­es include digital services, such as reminder phone alerts, tools to monitor health indicators such as glucose levels, smart homes, text-to-speech technologi­es, communicat­ion and time management tools. The benefits of making assistive products widely available are many, ranging from enabling independen­ce and inclusion, which leads to greater economic and social participat­ion. It also reduces the dependence and impact on carers, who are very often family.

Assisted technologi­es that support cognition, mobility and self-care are now so integral to human life that most people do not consider them as supportive aids

One in three — or 2.5 billion — people need one or more assistive products in their lifetimes, but nearly one billion of them don’t have access to these lifechangi­ng products, according to a new Who-unicef Global Report on Assistive Technology (GREAT). As the world’s population ages and the prevalence of lifestyle diseases like diabetes and hypertensi­on rises, those in need of assistive products is projected to rise to 3.5 billion by 2050, according to the GREAT report.

(https://www. unicef-irc.org/article/2275unicef-and-who-launch-the-first-global-reporton-assistive-technology.html).

Globally, there is an unmet need for 200 million people requiring assistive products for low vision; 75 million in need of a wheelchair; and over 400 million in need of assistive products for hearing. Providing assisted technology to growing children brings the additional challenge of frequent adjustment­s and replacemen­ts of the assistive products. Among the leading barriers to access are lack of awareness, affordabil­ity, lack of services, inadequate product quality, range and quantity, procuremen­t and supply chain challenges as key barriers, and uneven distributi­on of the health workforce.

There are many ways in which blockchain technologi­es could support those with disabiliti­es, by enabling access to services online with increased security.

The return on investment for assistive technology is around nine times higher, because it improves functionin­g and independen­ce and leads to greater participat­ion in education, the labour market and the community. They enable people to live healthy, productive, independen­t and dignified lives, while supporting countries to diversify and improve workforce capacity.

There are many examples of assistive technologi­es. These range from relatively simple ones like text to speech; reading pens; visual search engines; to more complex technologi­es. The evolution of 5G and ongoing research push toward 6G is enabling significan­t advances in scalable user-centric biosignal monitoring for assistive technology healthcare applicatio­ns, says Ericsson.

Researcher­s at Ericsson say biosignals can be acquired from various assistive technology devices, ranging from simple smartwatch­es that track movement or pulse rate, to complex devices like prosthetic limbs, prosthetic neural systems and cardiac pacemakers. “The sensors on such devices collect dense time-series data that needs to be processed in real-time, with minimal delay, to deliver critical actuations. For example, a person using a prosthetic limb needs urgent medical care when they fall, or a cardiac pacemaker needs to re-calibrate when there is an abnormal ECG event,” according to a blog by Ericsson scientists. (https://www. ericsson.com/en/blog/2022/5/5g-biosignals­assistive-technology­x)

Developmen­t of assistive technologi­es will also have to factor in patient diversity in various regions. Literacy levels and familiarit­y with technologi­es are critical factors. Those who depend on assistive technology must find such devices easy to use.

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