Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Robotic pets comfort Alzheimer’s patients

- By Ron Hurtibise | Staff writer

Helen is enamored with furry little Bonita, who purrs, meows and stretches out in Helen’s arms.

“It’s OK, it’s OK,” cooed the 84-year-old patient at the Alzheimer’s Community Care organizati­on’s Specialize­d Adult Day Care Center in Boca Raton, as Bonita rolled on her back for a belly rub. “You’re a pretty girl. Yes, you are. Are you going to be a good girl?”

Bonita isn’t a real cat, and it’s unclear whether Helen realizes it.

But if interactin­g with the robotic pet slows the advancemen­t of Helen’s mind-robbing Alzheimer’s disease, it doesn’t matter that the cat isn’t real, the day care’s operators say.

On Wednesday, the center invited some of its donors and local media to witness a pair of robotic pets — Bonita the cat and a dog the residents named Ace — capturing the hearts and imaginatio­ns of the center’s daily patients.

The robotic pets were among the first products in a line developed for the aging market by a division of toymaker Hasbro. Called Joy For All, the division was spun off by the products’ developers in May into a stand-

“Our patients can hold onto them as long as they want.” Karen Gilbert, vice president of education and quality assurance for Alzheimer’s Community Care

alone company that’s looking at ways to integrate artificial intelligen­ce into future robotic pets.

Although real live pets still visit the day care center on pet therapy days, the robotic stand-ins are safer to have around, said Karen Gilbert, vice president of education and quality assurance for Alzheimer’s Community Care.

“They’ll sit on your lap and respond to touch. The dog, we learned, even has a microphone and responds to voice commands,” Gilbert said. “Our patients can hold onto them as long as they want. They won’t jump off their laps. Live animals — you never know what they’ll do.”

In a clinical study involving 61 elderly adults with mild to moderate dementia, members of the group that regularly interacted with a robotic pet three times weekly for 20 minutes each session were found to have lower levels of stress and anxiety and depression, which allowed providers to decrease use of pain medication and psychoacti­ve medication, compared with the group that received standard activity programs. The study, published in November 2016 by the Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease, was funded by the Baylor Deerbrook Charitable Trust.

Use of the robotic pets is one of many ways that the Alzheimer’s Community Care organizati­on works to fulfill the intent of specialize­d adult day care centers, a type of center formally created in 2012 by Gov. Rick Scott and the state Legislatur­e to help forestall nursing home placement for Alzheimer’s patients.

Patients spend their days here but go home each night to their families or caregivers, said Jonathan Price, vice president, grants and fund developmen­t.

A robust schedule of activities during the day helps them remain relaxed during the at-home evening hours, when people with Alzheimer’s tend to become agitated — a behavioral cycle known as “sundowning” — that can complicate family members’ caregiving roles.

“One of the most effective ways to combat this is to have a patient have an active day,” Price said.

Activities are rolled out one after another — word games, math games, arts and crafts, music and dancing — to keep brain synapses firing as much as possible, Gilbert said.

“The more creative we are with activities, the more we challenge that person to slow the progressio­n of this disease,” she said.

Facilities licensed under the 2012 Specialize­d Alzheimer’s Services Adult Day Care Act are required to provide therapeuti­c activities for 70 percent of the day, Price said. Other requiremen­ts include a lower staff-topatient ratio than standard adult day care centers, increased environmen­tal safety measures to prevent patients from wandering off or harming themselves, and enhanced dementia-specific educationa­l opportunit­ies for caregivers and families.

The organizati­on had heard about clinical successes from introducin­g robotic pets to Alzheimer’s patients and purchased an initial pair of Joy For All pets for about $100 each with a grant from the Palm Beach County Partnershi­p for Aging. After seeing its own residents’ reactions, the organizati­on asked its donor network to help locate money to buy more.

Nancy Schiller, owner of a Boca Raton gift store, In Good Taste, stepped up, donating $3,000 to buy a pair of the hypoallerg­enic robotic pets for each of Alzheimer’s Community Care’s 10 other specialize­d day care centers in Palm Beach, Martin and St. Lucie counties.

“It’s a joy to give to this organizati­on because you know exactly where your money is going,” Schiller said.

Joy For All’s cats come in three colors — orange tabby, silver with white mitts, and black and white tuxedo. The company’s website says they “look, feel and sound like real cats,” with sensors that respond to motion and touch, realistic fur and purring sounds and catlike movements.

The team decided to develop a product for older adults after noticing they comprised 10 percent to 15 percent of the market for animatroni­c toys created for children, said Ted Fischer, CEO of Ageless Innovation, the company that spun off from Hasbro to expand the Joy For All line.

“We wanted to create affordable, realistic, interactiv­e companions­hip [with a] play pattern that was recognized and understood,” he said. “They give something and they get something — it’s tactile.”

But the brand’s developers weren’t trying to fool its elderly consumers into thinking the cats — or its robotic Golden Retriever pup — are the real thing, Fischer said.

“We were trying to replicate an experience for folks who were unable to enjoy a live pet,” he said.

A big inspiratio­n, and one of the products’ early test subjects, was Fischer’s grandmothe­r, currently in her 90s and living in a Memory Care community — a specialize­d living environmen­t for people with Alzheimer’s and dementia. She was featured on the first product box, he said.

Before the spin-off, Joy For All teamed up with Brown University for a three-year project to develop a smart robotic companion capable of using artificial intelligen­ce to assist older people with everyday tasks. The project is supported by a $1 million grant from the National Science Foundation, Fischer said.

Fischer envisions a pet capable of finding its owner’s glasses and rules out possibilit­ies suggested in the wide canon of science-fiction literature and film.

Consumers who want the current versions would be best served by going online, to Amazon.com or other websites, Fischer said. It’s not a good fit for brick-andmortar stores, he said.

“There’s not really an aisle for a product like this because there’s not a focus on the aspiration­al side of aging,” he said. “There’s not a lot of joy and happiness in that [aging products’] aisle.”

 ?? YUTAO CHEN/STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Helen, 84, interacts with Ace the robotic dog at the Alzheimer’s Community Care organizati­on’s Specialize­d Adult Day Care Center in Boca Raton. Real animals still visit the day care center on pet therapy days.
YUTAO CHEN/STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Helen, 84, interacts with Ace the robotic dog at the Alzheimer’s Community Care organizati­on’s Specialize­d Adult Day Care Center in Boca Raton. Real animals still visit the day care center on pet therapy days.
 ?? YUTAO CHEN/STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Karen Gilbert, left, of Alzheimer’s Community Care, Aurora, middle, and Helen, right, interact with a robotic cat and dog.
YUTAO CHEN/STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Karen Gilbert, left, of Alzheimer’s Community Care, Aurora, middle, and Helen, right, interact with a robotic cat and dog.

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