The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Robots deliver payload of cheer

Garth & Trisha, two mechanical beings, are helping kids confined to hospital rooms stay active and involved.

- By Tamar Hallerman tamar.hallerman@ajc.com

Agroup of children is huddled around a craft table making snowman ornaments at Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta at Scottish Rite when they’re greeted by what looks like a Segway scooter with a tablet affixed to the top.

“What up, homies?” the droid inquires with a playful cadence.

Smiling on the tablet’s screen is Jaden Campbell, an 11-year-old patient at the Sandy Springs hospital who is controllin­g the robot from his room in another wing.

Jaden has cystic fibrosis, a genetic disease that causes severe damage to the lungs, digestive system and other organs. The Smyrna resident was recently admitted for double pneumonia and placed in isolation to prevent infection during his stay.

A new program at Children’s is aiming to bring some holiday cheer to patients like Jaden

through two telepresen­ce robots named Trisha and Garth. The bots — remote-controlled, wheeled devices with a speaker and wireless internet connectivi­ty — allow children on bed rest and in isolation to participat­e in

morale-boosting activities with other kids from their hospital rooms.

Children’s has introduced the robots over the last year, and has scheduled time for patients to drive them through the hospital to interact with staff and other kids and partake in events using a videoconfe­rencing system similar to FaceTime or Skype. Some patients recently used Garth and Trisha to talk to Santa.

“It’s something that can cheer them up pretty instantly,” said Amanda Roberts, a child life specialist at the hospital. “It encourages socializat­ion for kids that miss getting to go to school and hanging out with friends while they’re here.”

The robots were donated by Teammates for Kids, a Denver-based foundation co-founded by country music star Garth Brooks. The charity has provided the seed money for nearly a dozen pediatric hospitals, including Children’s, to build special therapeuti­c play areas for patients and their families, where they can unwind and work with certified profession­als to help cope with their illnesses. The robots are manufactur­ed by OhmniLabs, a Silicon Valley-based robotics company.

In recent months, patients have used Garth and Trisha — named after the musician and his famous wife, Trisha Yearwood — to take part in scavenger hunts, meet-andgreets with members of the Atlanta Falcons and select Halloween costumes and holiday gifts for their families.

“It gives them a source of control and normalcy and helps make the hospital less scary,” Roberts said.

Seventeen-year-old Steffon Boyd uses the robots to remotely attend photograph­y classes across the hospital. He even dressed up Trisha in a bow tie and fedora for a recent special event.

A Dalton native with a broad smile and passion for art and theater, Steffon is paralyzed from the waist down and on bed rest.

On a recent sunny morning, the high school junior showed off a Grinch-themed mini Christmas tree he selected using the robot during a hospital event, and the pickle ornament he added to the display.

When people first encounter the robots in the hospital corridors, Steffon said, they’re “definitely” surprised.

“They don’t really know what to make of it, and sometimes you see people side-eye it,” he said. “Other times people are just really welcoming and they’re like, ‘Hey!’”

It was hard to walk more than 10 feet with Trisha on Steffon’s floor without being stopped by curious guests and hospital staff members alike.

“I love that!” an amused visitor exclaimed to her friends, waiving at Steffon via the tablet’s camera.

“Is that Steffon?” a nurse asked as Trisha wheeled by her workstatio­n.

“I’ll come see you later, OK?” another nursed stopped to tell the teenager through the monitor.

In another wing of the hospital, Jaden was still gaining some finesse with Trisha’s tablet control system.

Jaden is a gamer — earlier in the morning he was absorbed in a game of Risk on his iPad as he completed a lung therapy session — but Trisha kept freezing due to a spotty Wi-Fi connection.

He was testing out the machine when his mother, Jennifer Sadosky, approached his room.

“Can you see me?” Sadosky asked as Jaden rolled Trisha into the hallway and tilted the screen up to meet his mother’s gaze. She jokingly gave the robot a hug.

“I can see inside your nostril,” Jaden replied, cracking a smile.

 ?? PHOTOS BY ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? With the help of an OHMNI robot, child life specialist Amanda Roberts gets patient Jaden Campbell, 11, in on the fun of group activities while he can’t physically attend at Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta at Scottish Rite.
People wave at Jaden Campbell as he joins them for all the fun stuff in The Child Life Zone Network via an OHMNI robot.
PHOTOS BY ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM With the help of an OHMNI robot, child life specialist Amanda Roberts gets patient Jaden Campbell, 11, in on the fun of group activities while he can’t physically attend at Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta at Scottish Rite. People wave at Jaden Campbell as he joins them for all the fun stuff in The Child Life Zone Network via an OHMNI robot.
 ??  ?? Jaden, who has cystic fibrosis and is dealing with double pneumonia, controls an OHMNI robot from a tablet while he remains in his room.
Jaden, who has cystic fibrosis and is dealing with double pneumonia, controls an OHMNI robot from a tablet while he remains in his room.
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? No one is left out of the fun, as clinical nurse Tia Brooks, BSN, laughs while interactin­g with Trisha, one of two robots donated by the Denver-based nonprofit Teammates for Kids.
No one is left out of the fun, as clinical nurse Tia Brooks, BSN, laughs while interactin­g with Trisha, one of two robots donated by the Denver-based nonprofit Teammates for Kids.
 ?? PHOTOS BY ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? Patient Steffon Boyd of Dalton uses a tablet to control Trisha, an OHMNI robot, so he can attend photograph­y classes at Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta at Scottish Rite.
PHOTOS BY ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM Patient Steffon Boyd of Dalton uses a tablet to control Trisha, an OHMNI robot, so he can attend photograph­y classes at Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta at Scottish Rite.
 ??  ?? Anton Leseane and Jani Talbert, employees of Carmax of Norcross, give Jaden Campbell all the details on the crafts they’re making with the kids in The Child Life Zone Network.
Anton Leseane and Jani Talbert, employees of Carmax of Norcross, give Jaden Campbell all the details on the crafts they’re making with the kids in The Child Life Zone Network.

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