You'll have to hope your doctor knows about this and can prescribe it. Maybe your insurance will pay for it.
After Years of Clinical Trial Success, Collaboration with Leading Hospitals and Recognition for Innovation, Neuro Rehab Pioneer Eyes Entry into Consumer Market for Home System Use
ATLANTA, May 7, 2019
/PRNewswire/ -- Motus Nova, a technology firm offering the only robotic
system approved by the FDA to be as effective as an in-person therapist
for remote stroke rehabilitation, announced today that it is expanding
its list of partner hospitals and clinics using the device, as well as
making plans to introduce its patented system to the consumer market for
home use in Q3 2019.
Twenty-five hospitals in the Atlanta
area within Emory Healthcare, the Grady Health System and the Wellstar
Health System are joining the growing list of hospitals that have
partnered with Motus Nova to use its technology for rehabilitation
therapy for stroke survivors.
A
collaborator with top-ranked institutions such as Mayo Clinic,
Cleveland Clinic and Massachusetts General Hospital, Motus Nova began a
decade ago pioneering a robotics device using Artificial Intelligence
(AI) to accelerate recovery from neurological injuries such as strokes.
Named one of the 10 Most Innovative Companies in Georgia by the Technology Association of Georgia
in 2019, Motus Nova is now transitioning from years of success in the
clinical setting—where its system has helped thousands of stroke
survivors regain their independence—to bring its benefits to stroke
survivors continuing their rehabilitation at home.
A robotic system for active-assist stroke therapyMotus
Nova was founded to fill a real need: To provide a way for stroke
survivors to get the many hours of therapy required for brain healing
without requiring real-time oversight at every session by an onsite
clinician.
The
Motus Nova Hand Mentor and Foot Mentor are sleeve-like robots that fit
over a stroke survivor's impaired hand or foot. Equipped with an
active-assist air muscle and a suite of sensors and accelerometers, they
provide clinically appropriate assistance and resistance while
individual's perform the needed therapeutic exercises. A touchscreen
console provides goal-directed biofeedback through interactive
games—which Motus Nova calls "theratainment"—that make the tedious
process of neuro rehab engaging and fun.
"It's
a system that has proven to be a valuable partner to stroke therapy
professionals, where it complements skilled clinical care by augmenting
the repetitive rehabilitation requirements of stroke recovery and
freeing the clinician to do more nuanced care and assessment," said Dr. Nick Housley,
director of clinical research for Motus Nova. "And while we continue to
fill orders for the system to support therapy in the clinic and
hospital, we also are looking to use our system to fill the gap patients
often experience in receiving the needed therapy once they go home."
Filling the outpatient therapy gapWith
seven million stroke survivors in the U.S. and 800,000 new cases every
year, strokes are more prevalent than heart attacks in the U.S. They are
the leading cause of long-term disability, yet many stroke survivors
aren't getting the therapy they need to recover.
Why?
Current insurance plans for reimbursing stroke therapy after an
in-hospital stay are based on the model for reimbursing outpatient rehab
therapy when an individual is recovering from an orthopedic injury or
surgery. The problem is that it's false equivalence. It takes many more
repetitions of therapy to elicit the neural change and achieve the
neuroplasticity required for stroke recovery than it does for an
individual to bring range of motion and normal functionality back to a
repaired ligament or replaced joint. The stroke survivor must work to
forge new neural pathways and re-teach the brain to perform everyday
functions with the hand or foot affected by the stroke.
Lower cost, more frequent treatmentClinical
studies show that neuroplasticity begins after approximately many 10's
to 100's of hours of active guided rehab. The healing process can take
months or years, and sometimes the individuals might never fully
recover. Yet the typical regimen for stroke survivors is only two to
three hours of outpatient therapy per week for a period of three to four
months.
"These
constraints were instituted by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services (CMS) in determining Medicare reimbursement without a full
understanding of the appropriate dosing required for stroke recovery,
and many private insurers have adopted the policy, as well," said David Wu,
Motus Nova's CEO. Motus Nova plans to offer a more practical model. "By
making the system available for home use at a reasonable weekly rate as
long as the patient needs it, the individual can perform therapy
anytime," Wu said. "A higher dosage of therapy can be achieved without
the inconvenience of scheduling appointments with therapists or
traveling to and from a clinic, and without the high cost of going to an
outpatient center every time the individual wants to do therapy. We are
looking forward to offering this new model. More details about pricing
and ordering will be available as we approach our projected launch date
this summer."
Praise from clinicians, users
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