April 14, 2010
ReJoyce at GF Strong in Vancouver
ReJoyce was recently on display at the GF Strong Rehabilitation Institute in Vancouver. Below are some pictures of Jennifer Loffree demonstrating ReJoyce to a crowd of Canadian Federal and Provincial politicians, including British Columbia’s Lieutenant Governor.

ReJoyce At GF Strong in Vancouver | Spinal Cord Injury Rehabilitation
ReJoyce is centerpiece of an ongoing spinal cord injury rehabilitation study in Vancouver. The study is investigating the rehabilitation efficacy of ReJoyce in combination with a hand stimulation system for people who have suffered a spinal cord injury. Subjects are treated at home, using our at-home rehabilitation software.
For information about ReJoyce, ongoing clinical trials, or anything else relating to home-based stroke and spinal cord injury rehabilitation, please contact us.
March 26, 2010
ReJoyce For Stroke and Spinal Cord Rehab: Video
This video was put together by Alberta Innovates and published in mid-March. It features interviews with ReJoyce inventors Dr. Jan Kowalczewski and Dr. Arthur Prochazka, as well as clinical trial investigators Dr. Mary Galea and Su Ling Chong. Ginny Bockman, a study participant, is also featured.
Here’s the transcript:
Dr. Prochazka - “As far as we know, this is the first large-scale study of in-home telerehabilitation in the world. I think this is the first study where we have learned how to interact with people in their homes, take them right through a training program of many weeks, measure the outcome, and then also, of course, develop the technology that allows all of this to happen.”
Dr. Kowalczewski - “I really hope it reaches as many people as it can. The reason why I’m saying this is because we’re seeing such positive results in our studies. I really hope that anyone that’s had a stroke or spinal cord injury can really benefit from this.”
Su-ling Chong - “In conventional therapy, you go to a place and you just do the functional tasks. We sneak the functions into the game, and patients enjoy it. Most of the time I have to tell the person that their hour is up because, usually, they just want to keep going.”
Dr. Galea - “A device like the ReJoyce is useful for people because it can be installed in their own home very simply, and people can use it in the comfort of their own home without needing to travel. The telerehabilitation enables the therapist to keep in touch with them, monitor their progress, and deal with any difficulties they might be having. That is a very important way to of continuing to enable people to continue improving without tying them to the hospital’s apron strings. It allows them to get on with their own lives.”
Mrs. Bockman - “When I woke up in the hospital, I couldn’t move my arms; I couldn’t move my hands and I thought, “how am I going to live my life?” When I started doing this [ReJoyce telerehabilitation], a lot more things started coming back to me. I’m able to hold my brush, with my hand, brush my own hair, brush my own teeth, feed myself. Senses have also gone back to playing with a Sony Playstation. I can kick my husband’s but on a lot of games, and I’m happy with that.”
January 14, 2010
Update from Vancouver Trial
ReJoyce telerehabilitation is currently being used in several SCI (Spinal Cord Injury) treatment studies around the world. Here’s a great comment we received today from Vancouver:
“I had a particularly exciting training session with my participant yesterday. For the first time he was able to play Weedo at Level 60 successfully, using the Peg and NO STIMULATION!! Six weeks ago when we started, he was not able to play Weedo with much success at Level One. He and I are both thrilled.”"
Jennifer Loffree, UBC
July 15, 2009
The Virtual Clinic
I recently heard a health care policy maker say that, “The Western World is drowning in health care costs.” He’s right: according to PricewaterhouseCoopers, the burden of US health care costs rose by 9.9% in 2008 and is forecast to rise 9.2% and 9.0% in 2009 and 2010, respectively. The story is similar in a single-payer system, like that in Canada, where 17% of the government’s entire annual revenue is spent on health care.
Interestingly, the Canadian government pays for about 70% of the country’s health care costs whereas the US government pays around 40%.
With that in mind, what is the Virtual Clinic, what role does the virtual clinic play, and who benefits?
The Virtual Clinic
The pure Virtual Clinic is a clinic with little-to-no office space or equipment, outsourced support staff (filing, book-keeping, etc.), offering targeted services to a specific market. Such clinics offer services to a clientele in their own homes, or a remote care facility, using the Internet as a delivery mechanism.
Although no purely virtual clinics currently exist, hybrids are beginning to emerge, and the trend is pointing heavily in their favor. Physicians in Hawaii, for example, are already offering at-home family medical services over the Internet using online software from a variety of different vendors.
Other popular examples include the following:
- online speech pathology
- online psychiatry
- Internet-supervised home-based rehabilitation
What role does the virtual clinic play?
As the population ages, and after people have accidents, transportation to a doctor’s office, or care facility becomes increasingly more difficult and time-consuming. The clinic itself requires space for patients and practitioners, a reception area and waiting room, as well as parking space, maintenance staff, etc. Clinics of any type are expensive to set up and maintain.
In many cases, clinics offer a wide range of services that require the burden of high operational overhead, as mentioned above.
The virtual clinic offers clinicians the opportunity to eliminate these overheads and to specialize in one or two areas of practice, such as upper extremity exercise and rehab.
So, what’s the bottom line?
1. a huge reduction in costs
2. better service quality
3. increased flexibility for patient and practitioner alike
Who benefits from a virtual clinic?
Despite wildly different health care systems, government involvement in health care in both Canada and the USA is massive: Canada’s government pays 70% of health care costs, whereas the government of the United States pays a little more than 40% (according to each government’s respective 2009 budgets).
In a single-payer system, like that in Canada, clinics are incentivized to service as few people as possible, as quickly as possible.
In a private/public system, like that in the USA, clinics are incentivized to fill beds, and service as many patients as possible, each for as long as that patient’s insurance policy will allow.
Despite their differences, the virtual clinic is ideal for both systems.
In Canada, the clinic dramatically reduces per-patient expenses for the most common treatments, maximizing efficiency. In the USA, the clinic dramatically reduces per-patient expenses for the most common treatments, maximizing profits.
Of course, the virtual clinic is a long way from replacing the conventional clinic entirely, but with new affordable equipment and Internet-based delivery software, a large percentage of conventional clinical activities can finally be moved out of the clinic, along with their hefty costs.
July 6, 2009
CTV Runs ReJoyce Therapy Story
Here’s a story about a scientific study using ReJoyce to treat SCI that ran nationally in Canada on CTV on July 4.
June 23, 2009
ReJoyce for Spinal Cord Injury (SCI)
Last week we had some press coverage regarding a joint Canadian-Australian spinal cord injury study. Here are some videos from aired nationally in their respective countries.