The Palm Beach Post

UNF project adapts toys for disabled children

Finding toys for kids with severe disabiliti­es difficult.

- By Jason Dearen Associated Press

JACKSONVIL­LE — Because of her cerebral palsy, 4-year-old Scarlett Wilgis has trouble opening her hands and can’t get around without help. Her parents have scoured store shelves and websites for toys for her but have mostly been disappoint­ed.

“Finding the toys at WalMart or Target, they’re pretty much non-existent,” said mom Dezaraye Wilgis, sitting with Scarlett in front of their t winkling Christmas tree in St. Augustine. “Or if you get them through a medical supplier, they’re extremely expensive.”

While major toy-makers have changed with the times and sell dolls with wheelchair­s and crutches, those designed to be used by children with severe disabiliti­es are still difficult, if not impossible, to find. Because the toys have to be customized for each child, the cost can skyrocket.

This conundrum gave two University of North Florida professors an idea: mix engineerin­g and physical therapy students in a lab with the goal of converting toys from store shelves into custom-made fun for disabled children. The Adaptive Toy Project is now in its third year and has drawn a fiveyear grant from the National Institutes of Health.

It is helping families such as Scarlett’s while giving the students a dose of community service and real-world experience that will stick with them long after graduation.

Dr. Alison Cernich, a neuropsych­ologist and director at the NIH’s Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Developmen­t, said the agency funded the program because it forces students from different fields to collaborat­e and solve a problem in the community.

“This program is getting students in the early phases of their training thinking about ordinary objects, toys, and how to adapt those toys so that children with limitation­s can use and play with them like children without limitation­s,” she said.

O n a r e c e n t d a y, t h e school’s small lab buzzed with the sound of tools and chatter as students customized cars for their new owners.

Chris Martin, an electrical engineerin­g student, had removed the hood of Scarlett’s car, exposing its wires.

A l a r g e p u s h b u t t o n replaced the steering, and light sensors mounted underneath the car will allow it to follow a line of tape along the floor whenever Scarlett hits the button. Now, Scarlett’s parents can design routes for the car with tape or use a remote-control mode for family walks.

When Martin first met Scarlett’s mother, “she actually cried, and it just made me want to work harder,” Martin said. “I just want to make it as perfect as possible for her.”

The cars retail between $250 and $500; the customizat­ion makes them worth well over $1,000. The families, about 18 so far, get the cars free.

Mary Lundy, a UNF professor of physical therapy who started the Adaptive Toy Project with an engineerin­g colleague, said the students meet with families, and go to therapy appointmen­ts and schools.

“Engineerin­g students teach the physical therapy students how to modify basic electronic­s ... and in the pro- cess engineers learn how to do people-centered designs, and how to look at their clients differentl­y,” Lundy said.

For the kids, it’s also a way to continue important therapies through play.

Dr. Peter Rosenbaum, a professor of pediatrics at McMaster University in Canada, said his field is increasi n g l y f o c u s i n g o n “a u g - mented mobility,” to give kids a way to move around so they can be more independen­t.

“We c a n ’ t f i x t h e m , ” Rose nbaum s a i d. “What we c an do instead is say, ‘What would a child at this age and stage of developmen­t be doing if they didn’t have their impairment? How can we give them those experience­s?’ This changes the perspectiv­es of everyone around her, and her perspectiv­e of herself.”

UNF’s program is one of 60 related toy car programs for disabled children internatio­nally that are part of the Go Baby Go network, but is the only one that has enlisted students to customize the vehicles for free.

After weeks of work, Scarlett finally tested the car Martin and his colleagues built. They strapped her in and showed her how to hit the push button in the toy she would hopefully use for at least three years. The car drove forward, and Scarlett rocked back and forth. Her mother fought back tears, and her father walked alongside her.

“For her, she’s going to be able to get out more and not be trapped by a wheelchair ... and for us it’ll be nice to see her interact with other children,” Dezaraye said. “It’s amazing.”

 ?? JASON DEAREN / AP ?? University of North Florida students Jason Pavichall (from left), Chris Martin and Garrett Baumann work to customize a toy car so that it can be used by a girl with cerebral palsy. At the university, engineerin­g and physical therapy students convert...
JASON DEAREN / AP University of North Florida students Jason Pavichall (from left), Chris Martin and Garrett Baumann work to customize a toy car so that it can be used by a girl with cerebral palsy. At the university, engineerin­g and physical therapy students convert...

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