Biotechnology and the benefits it can offer are playing an increasingly important role in all areas of clinical rehabilitation. However it is still often regarded with suspicion and mistrust by many clinicians and their patients. Enabling Technologies:: Body Image and Body Function is intended to help all those who encounter biological innovations within their clinical practice to attain a better understanding of their potential and the benefits they can offer for their patients.
Compiled and edited by two of the leading researchers in the field of rehabilitation technology the book brings together 29 contributions from experts in major centres in 10 different countries.
Enabling Technologies:: Body Image and Body Function presents the full range of technological developments which may be used in the field of clinical rehabilitation and explains and demystifies their practical relevance for the non-specialist clinician. In doing so it makes an important contribution to this fast developing field. It will provide an invaluable source of reference to all those working in the field of rehabilitation who encounter biotechnological innovations as part of their professional practice. Clinicians who understand the potential of the innovations biotechnology can offer and are able to deal with the emotional responses of the patients will be well placed to achieve faster and more effective rehabilitation for those in their care. This book can help them to do this.
Part 1: Interacting with technology Using virtual reality to help reduce pain during severe burn wound care procedures Enabling communication: pictures as language Moving sound Robotics and rehabilitation - the role of robot-mediated therapy post stroke
Part 2: Listening to the body Psychophysiological recording and biofeedback: tools enabling people to control their own physiology Affective feedback The thought translation device - communication by means of EEG self-regulation for locked-in patients
Part 3: Technology of replacement Reaching with electricity: externally powered prosthetics and embodiment Psychology and hand transplantation: clinical experiences Implantable replacement hearts
Part 4: Living through technology Complex emotion: neuroprosthesis for grasping applications Technological enframing in the haemodialysis patient Critical care in high technology environments
Conclusion Thinking through enabling technologies Guidelines for development and implementation
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