Germany's healthcare sector suffers from a shortage of nursing staff, and robotic solutions are being explored as a means to provide quality care. While many robotic systems have already been established in various medical fields (e.g., surgical robots, logistics robots), there are only a few very specialized robotic applications in the care sector. In this work, a multi-functional robot is applied in a hospital, capable of performing activities in the areas of transport and logistics, interactive assistance, and documentation. The service robot platform HoLLiE was further developed, with a focus on implementing innovative solutions for handling non-rigid objects, motion planning for non-holonomic motions with a wheelchair, accompanying and providing haptic support to patients, optical recognition and control of movement exercises, and automated speech recognition. Furthermore, the potential of a robot platform in a nursing context was evaluated by field tests in two hospitals. The results show that a robot can take over or support certain tasks. However, it was noted that robotic tasks should be carefully selected, as robots are not able to provide empathy and affection that are often required in nursing. The remaining challenges still exist in the implementation and interaction of multi-functional capabilities, ensuring ease of use for a complex robotic system, grasping highly heterogeneous objects, and fulfilling formal and infrastructural requirements in healthcare (e.g., safety, security, and data protection).

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11496034PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/frobt.2024.1325143DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

multi-functional robot
8
robot platform
8
robot
5
robotic
5
holliecares development
4
development multi-functional
4
robot professional
4
professional care
4
care germany's
4
germany's healthcare
4

Similar Publications

Germany's healthcare sector suffers from a shortage of nursing staff, and robotic solutions are being explored as a means to provide quality care. While many robotic systems have already been established in various medical fields (e.g.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

An adhesive, stretchable, and freeze-resistant conductive hydrogel strain sensor for handwriting recognition and depth motion monitoring.

J Colloid Interface Sci

January 2025

Key Laboratory of Science & Technology of Eco-Textile, Ministry of Education, Donghua University, College of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Innovation Center for Textile Science and Technology, No. 2999 North Renmin Road, Shanghai 201620, China. Electronic address:

Article Synopsis
  • The study introduces a new freeze-resistant conductive hydrogel called PHEA-NaSS/G, which maintains its properties in extreme environments by modifying hydrogen bonds through a special solvent system.
  • This hydrogel boasts impressive mechanical strength (174 kPa) and flexibility (2105% strain), making it suitable for monitoring human motion and demonstrating excellent sensing capabilities.
  • Additionally, it can accurately recognize handwritten English letters using advanced algorithms, suggesting valuable applications in areas like soft robotics and health monitoring.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Responsive Hydrogel-Based Modular Microrobots for Multi-Functional Micromanipulation.

Small

November 2024

School of Mechanical Engineering, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, 47907, USA.

Microrobots show great potential in biomedical applications such as drug delivery and cell manipulations. However, current microrobots are mostly fabricated as a single entity and type and the tasks they can perform are limited. In this paper, modular microrobots, with an overall size of 120 µm × 200 µm, are proposed with responsive mating components, made from stimuli-responsive hydrogels, and application specific end-effectors for microassembly tasks.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Robotic lower-limb prostheses, with their actively powered joints, may significantly improve amputee users' mobility and enable them to obtain healthy-like gait in various modes of locomotion in daily life. However, timely recognition of the amputee users' locomotive mode and mode transition still remains a major challenge in robotic lower-limb prosthesis control. In the paper, the authors present a new multi-dimensional dynamic time warping (mDTW)-based intent recognizer to provide high-accuracy recognition of the locomotion mode/mode transition sufficiently early in the swing phase, such that the prosthesis' joint-level motion controller can operate in the correct locomotive mode and assist the user to complete the desired (and often power-demanding) motion in the stance phase.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Soft pneumatic actuators (SPAs) play a crucial role in generating movements and forces in soft robotic systems. However, existing SPA designs require significant structural modifications to be used in applications other than their original design. The present article proposes an omni-purpose fully 3D-printable SPA design inspired by membrane type mold and cast SPAs.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!