Around the world, an estimated 2.4 billion people are currently living with a health condition that benefits from rehabilitation and the need for such services and interventions is predicted to increase globally, says the World Health Organisation.
Professor Lewis, an expert in musculoskeletal biology, is involved in a new venture that will “revolutionise rehabilitation” and bring together research, innovation, education, and training alongside clinical practice to drive excellence in this area.
“The National Rehabilitation Centre is a £100m development that will sit a few hundred metres from the Defence Medical Rehabilitation Centre at Stanford Hall, 4 miles from our º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ campus; it will revolutionise rehabilitation”, Professor Lewis tells podcast listeners.
“Rehabilitation is a fascinating area as it means something to everyone but never the same thing to everyone. I see rehabilitation as having a major life event – whether this is a car accident or being diagnosed with type II diabetes – and then going through a rehabilitation process after that.
“Rehabilitation is always seen as old people’s homes and zimmer frames, but it’s way more than that and it encompasses multiple disciplines such as health, medical, and biological sciences, plus engineering, it’s really broad.
“This Centre will treat people and also bring together a community of researchers to create a world-leading centre of excellence and it’s exciting that º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ is one of the drivers of the project. It’s going to be transformational.”
The NRC will focus on three types of rehabilitation and look at the role technology can play in each:
- Pre-rehabilitation: how we can prevent something happening in the first place (i.e., type II diabetes) or taking steps quickly if it does happen so the consequences are not so severe
- Acute rehabilitation: when something has just happened and what to do next
- Chronic rehabilitation: long term rehabilitation.
“Wearable technology is obviously really important in this area, so if we can devise devices and apps that can help people do the right thing at the right time if anything does happen, that’s great”, Professor Lewis says.
“And then there’s the cool science fiction things like exoskeletons and things for people to wear.”
While discussing ongoing research in these areas, Professor Lewis flagged that some scientists believe a small animal may hold some big answers.
“Axolotls are part of the salamander family and they’re interesting because they can regenerate their limbs”, Professor Lewis explains.
“And that's what we're particularly interested in: regeneration and repair. There are some schools of thought that if you understand how creatures like this or lizards can regenerate lost organs or tails then it might help us understand how human beings might do it.
“I don't necessarily subscribe to that school of thought, but they’re fascinating creatures!”
Images courtesy of Getty Images.