Is the device meant to be used in driving schools or healthcare facilities?
Rieß: We aim to assist healthcare facilities and rehabilitation centers. Healthcare facilities often have a training vehicle that is typically located outside or in an underground parking garage, which does not deliver supportive training conditions. Quite often, the car is also sectioned and no longer suited for flexible use. Meanwhile, healthcare facilities can set up the REHA-SLIDE in a gym or take it straight into a patient room.
Newly affected patients, who are paraplegic as a result of an accident often think they will never get into a car and drive again. Yet this is a crucial factor that supports their mobility, independence, and the return to work. The device improves motivation and boosts their self-esteem, especially once they realize that it allows them to practice car transfers and that they can be successful.
You also offer the REHA-SLIDE with different features such as hand controls. Why?
Rieß: When therapists use the REHA-SLIDE to practice car transfers, they can show patients the different available options and how to use them. This might give the patient an idea on how he can operate a car without legs, for example. In this case, patients might need hand controls to operate both gas and brakes, a left foot gas accelerator pedal or multi-function spinner knobs to operate turn signals, windshield wipers, and honk the horn. These features also motivate and mentally prepare the patient to drive a car again.
Healthcare facilities decide what equipment and special features they need. For example, some facilities only practice front passenger scenarios. In this case, we mount a slide board on the car’s passenger side or we install different orthopedic seats.