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User experience study of an affordable manual standing wheelchair

  • Samson Daniel
  • , Nidhi Rawat
  • , Rajalakshmi Iyer
  • , Javeed Shaikh-Mohammed
  • , Swostik Sourav Dash
  • , Vivek Sarda
  • , S. Sujatha

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Scopus citations

Abstract

Purpose: The manual user-operated Arise Standing Wheelchair (SWC) is the end-result of multiple design iterations based on comments from user trials. The Arise SWC provides standing functionality, outdoor mobility, affordability, and customizability. This paper describes a user experience study of the Arise SWC’s pre-commercial version. Methods: Thirty participants (N = 30, 25 Male, 5 Female) were recruited for the study. All the participants were people with spinal cord injury. The study was conducted over a period of six weeks (five participants per week) within the hospital premises under the supervision of clinical personnel. A 30 min interactive training session involved thirteen activities. During the trial period, the participants were trained to perform twenty-two activities to familiarize themselves with the SWC. The participants were also trained to perform four functional usage activities with the SWC. At the end of the study, participant responses to ten outcome measures were captured using a smiley-based Likert-scale questionnaire. Results: A majority of the participants (93.3%) felt happy when they stood in the SWC. The majority participants (83.3%) preferred the Arise SWC over their current wheelchair. Also, 80% participants anticipated that they could get more work done at home using the standing function of the wheelchair. Conclusions: A one-time fitting and training ensured optimal effort for the SWC operation, correct posture, and comfortable user experience. With proper dissemination and awareness, it is believed that the Arise SWC will benefit eligible users and improve their quality of life.IMPLICATIONS FOR REHABILITATION The Arise wheelchair provides standing functionality, outdoor mobility, affordability, and customizability. Study confirms that incorporating standing functionality can improve the quality of life for wheelchair users. The majority of users were happy, felt safe and expected to do more with the standing functionality. Study results support further testing in real world conditions beyond the hospital setting.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1536-1543
Number of pages8
JournalDisability and Rehabilitation: Assistive Technology
Volume18
Issue number8
DOIs
StatePublished - 2023
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • assistive device
  • customizability
  • manual
  • Standing wheelchair
  • user experience study
  • user-operated

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