East Bay Times

Virtual reality helps caregivers experience patients’ ailments

- My Kerry Hannon

When Carrie Shaw was a freshman at the University of North Carolina, her mother, then 49, learned she had earlystage Alzheimer’s disease.

“I was really scared of my mom’s diagnosis,” said Shaw, founder and chief executive of the Los Angeles-based Embodied Labs, an immersive educationa­l technology company that uses virtual reality software to train health care profession­als who work with older adults.

“I had that avoidance reaction to let the family figure it out without me,” she said. “So after I graduated, I joined the Peace Corps for a two-year stint in the Dominican Republic. I wanted to

help and serve, but didn’t know how to in my own family.”

When she was 24, though, she faced it. Shaw, who has an undergradu­ate degree in public health, moved back to her family home in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, to be a full-time caregiver.

“At that point, my mom had fairly advanced dementia, but it was so meaningful to be with her, and we built a special relationsh­ip,” she said.

Although they became closer, Shaw, 32, was frustrated.

“I struggled so much to imagine how my mom was perceiving the world around her,” she said.

In 2014, she returned to school to earn a master of science degree in biomedical visualizat­ion at the University of Illinois at Chicago. Her thesis question: If we could step into the world of someone who is aging, could that help health care providers be more effective?

The evolving technology of virtual reality helped her answer that question. And four years ago, Shaw started Embodied Labs, alongside her sister, Erin Washington, who also cared for their mother, and is the chief product officer, and Thomas Leahy, a college classmate, now the firm’s chief technology officer.

The company’s software allows users to peer into the body and mind of someone confronted with aging issues: Cognitive decline such as Alzheimer’s, age-related vision and hearing loss, or neurodegen­erative diseases such as Parkinson’s and dementia.

The goal is to give users, including medical students, nurses, certified nursing assistants, assisted-living staff members and family caregivers, a better understand­ing of the challenges facing aging adults with these diseases or impairment­s through a first-person patient perspectiv­e.

Medical students, for example, can use the Embodied Labs VR headset and computer software for a 20-minute training program with 360-degree medical illustrati­ons of changes in the brain structure and activity. They can also tap into an immersive visual experience in which the student virtually enters the world of Beatriz,

a middle-age woman, as she advances through a decade of Alzheimer’s disease.

In another program, users embody Alfred, a 74-year-old man with high frequency hearing loss and age-related macular degenerati­on. The idea is to show that hearing and vision loss can make someone appear to have cognitive impairment although they do not.

The program experience is a day in Alfred’s life, including interactio­n with his doctor and his family. With the virtual reality goggles, the viewer’s eyesight is reduced by a dark spot in the middle of the visual field simulating macular degenerati­on. The diminishin­g vision makes eye contact, communicat­ion and easy tasks difficult and frustratin­g. The software also takes the user for a tour of the changes inside the retina as macular degenerati­on advances.

Embodied Labs’ latest program, launched in June, is the Eden Lab, which simulates experience­s of older LGBT adults.

“Misconcept­ions based on ageism, homophobia and transphobi­a can lead to health disparitie­s that impact physical and mental health,” Shaw said. “What I try to do with Embodied Labs is to provide that understand­ing gap, so people can get to that point faster than I did. It’s the convergenc­e of aging, emerging technology and the need to transform our workforce training methods in health and aging care.”

Startup funds to develop the platform and the software came from a handful of angel investors, friends and family. In addition, Shaw competed for grants and no-interest loans and received $250,000 as the 2018 winner of the XR Education Prize Challenge funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

This year, the company received seed funding of $3.2 million from several venture capital funds, including the WXR Fund, which invests in women entreprene­urs and in the next wave of computing.

“The opportunit­ies for immersive technology in health care are vast and span telehealth, therapeuti­cs and diagnostic­s, training and more,” said Martina Welkhoff, co-founder and managing partner of the WXR Fund. “Humans instinctiv­ely communicat­e and learn in 3D, so immersive technology is particular­ly powerful in complex, high-stakes systems such as health care.”

 ?? EMBODIED LABS VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A person uses a virtual reality applicatio­n that immerses users in the world of “Beatriz” as she advances through Alzheimer’s disease. Carrie Shaw created Embodied Labs to allow people to experience what it is like to grow older.
EMBODIED LABS VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES A person uses a virtual reality applicatio­n that immerses users in the world of “Beatriz” as she advances through Alzheimer’s disease. Carrie Shaw created Embodied Labs to allow people to experience what it is like to grow older.

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