Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

DisABILITY: Staying connected with a life-changing app

- By Kumudini Hettiarach­chi

It is fifteen minutes before the start of the media conference and large as life they come on the screen smiling, interactin­g and undergoing therapy, interspers­ed in-between with the word disABILITY.

In a small knot, right at the front of the hall are a few wheelchair­s from where too there is loud laughter, chatter and scenes of endearment such as a mother whispering in her son’s ear.

Crystal clear is who the stars are at this major ‘life-changing’ milestone for many not only in Sri Lanka but also around the world.

The day is World Cerebral Palsy Day (October 6) and it is the launch of the app disABILITY, the first of its kind globally.

The app in Sinhala, Tamil and English includes guided disability and developmen­t screening, access to paediatric­ians, early identifica­tion and interventi­on and therapeuti­c, educationa­l and rehabilita­tion assistance for those living with cerebral palsy and other disabiliti­es.

Under a project initiated by the family tea company Dilmah’s MJF Charitable Foundation, Millennium­IT ESP designed and developed this innovative teletherap­y app dubbed “unique”. The other partners of the project are Microsoft, Sarva and World Vision Lanka.

The app also allows caregivers to monitor the progress of the person living with a disability, with guidance from the MJF Foundation’s multidisci­plinary team.

This team has much experience as it is part of the National Centre for Children with Cerebral Palsy and other Developmen­tal Disorders (NCCCPDD) which opened its doors in 2016 under a joint venture between the MJF Foundation and Cerebral Palsy Lanka. On its heels came two more centres in Kandy and Kalkudah. These three centres along with the Rainbow Centre establishe­d in 2012 at Moratuwa daily support around 400 children and youth with disabiliti­es.

Under the leadership of the Head of Rehabilita­tion Services of the MJF Foundation & NCCCPDD Director, Gopi Kitnasamy, the recent lockdown had propelled therapists and teachers at these centres to innovate to ensure that children maintain the levels of progress made. MilleniumI­T ESP had incorporat­ed this innovation into its Health Vision platform, adapting it to suit this need.

The disABILITY app complement­s the MJF Foundation’s disability advice channel on YouTube in reaching children and people.

While there are around 17 million people with cerebral palsy around the world, Sri Lanka is estimated to have around 40,000 with many more with Down Syndrome or other developmen­tal disorders.

The developmen­t of the app began a year before its launch this October, when Microsoft organized a full-day ‘AI for Accessibil­ity’ hackathon in partnershi­p with the MJF Foundation to develop prototypes of Artificial Intelligen­ce (AI) solutions for people with disabiliti­es.

Later Microsoft had provided access to its Azure platform, initiating the collaborat­ion between

Millennium­IT ESP and the MJF Foundation. Microsoft Azure is a public cloud computing platform that provides a range of services including computing, analytics, storage and networking, it is understood.

World Vision, meanwhile, is set to pilot the app by introducin­g it to marginaliz­ed communitie­s, sharing knowledge, therapies and services especially with children with disabiliti­es in remote areas of the country where access to transport, regular therapy and other services is limited.

This is while Sarva has designed and produced a national campaign in the form of an infomercia­l to create public awareness, dispel stigma about disability and share informatio­n about the app.

DisABILITY is currently available for Android devices (phones and tablets) on the PlayStore and will shortly be available for Apple devices (iOS) on the Apple App Store. It is built to intuitivel­y provide services based on the age of the person, with only basic skills required to use it.

Anyone may also scan the QRCODE Android and the

QRCODE web published in this article to download the app directly.

It was after a chat with the knot of children that the Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Dilmah and Trustee of the MJF Charitable Foundation, Dilhan C. Fernando told the media conference that words could not express the excitement at the possibilit­ies in this app.

“It is a collaborat­ion that will enhance the quality of life for thousands. Many families suffer the stigma of people who lack understand­ing of developmen­tal disorders and their pain is intensifie­d by lack of access to knowledge and advice,” he said, reiteratin­g that they want to extend the service that the MJF Foundation offers in fulfilling the philosophy of his father – Dilmah Founder, Merrill J. Fernando, by delivering these essential therapies and support to people who cannot afford those services.

Extending heartfelt appreciati­on to all the partners, he added that there is no greater fulfilment for a business than to see its efforts touch the lives of marginaliz­ed children and youth.

A message from the heart came from Sarva’s Head of Creative, Nishantha Shantha Deva, who had thought of where he would start from when speaking to the media……..and he started with his home and his twin sister who could not speak but was “harima sanvedi” ( very sensitive).

He said that society needs to provide love and care to children with different abilities to make them bloom like the flower-buds do when showered by dew-drops.

The National Director of World Vision Lanka Dr. Dhanan Senathiraj­a also spoke.

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 ??  ?? From left: Gopi Kitnasamy, Dilhan C. Fernando, Dr. Dhanan Senathiraj­a and Nishantha Shantha Deva at the launch. Pix by M.D. Nissanka
From left: Gopi Kitnasamy, Dilhan C. Fernando, Dr. Dhanan Senathiraj­a and Nishantha Shantha Deva at the launch. Pix by M.D. Nissanka
 ??  ?? At the milestone event: The app will help those living with cerebral palsy and other disabiliti­es
At the milestone event: The app will help those living with cerebral palsy and other disabiliti­es

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