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Sharing the gift of hope through research
Community members and those in the field of health research attended a special open house and interactive tour by research groups at Lawson Health Research Institute – celebrating the holiday spirit and the gift of hope that is made possible through hospital-based research.
A part of St. Joseph’s Health Care London, Parkwood Institute represents the next era in care, recovery and rehabilitation. Across the site, clinical and research teams in different disciplines and specialties are collaborating in new ways.
The teams that make up Parkwood Institute Research, a Lawson program, are conducting clinical studies with the goal of understanding disease and improving care for a wide range of patients.
“Many people in the community know the high-quality and compassionate care that is supported by the various clinical teams at Parkwood Institute,” says Dr. Cheryl Forchuk, Beryl and Richard Ivey Research Chair in Aging, Mental Health, Rehabilitation and Recovery, and Assistant Scientific Director at Lawson. “What most don’t know is that we have research teams working across these sites, with each other and research patients.
Researchers tackle the most important challenges and provide access to highly innovative and meaningful solutions that improve the lives of patients and their families, added Dr. Forchuk.
At the open house on November 30, there were 11 interactive displays in the areas of cognitive vitality and brain health, mobility and activity and mental health. This included the Gait and Brain Laboratory, the Operational Stress Injury Clinic, wound care, the Mental Health Nursing Research Alliance and more:
- The Mental Health INcubator for Disruptive Solutions (MINDS) of London Middlesex is a social innovation lab focused on developing, testing, implementing and evaluating disruptive solutions that promote the mental and emotional wellbeing of Transition-Aged Youth in our London-Middlesex community.
- The Canadian Consortium on Neurodegeneration in Aging (CCNA), supported by CIHR and many partners, is the premier research hub for all aspects of research involving neurodegenerative diseases that affect cognition in aging – including Alzheimer's disease.
- A dynamic lab with the top neurorehabilitation evidence-based reviews in stroke, brain injury, spinal cord injury and multiple sclerosis, or insight into clinical trials of stroke rehabilitation using exoskeletons, exercise paradigms, pharmaceuticals, and clinical studies of psychosocial factors that influence chronic pain in brain injury and spinal cord injury populations.
The open house had a festive theme and each of the exhibits involved a problem solving element to encourage learning and foster teamwork.
Peggy Sattler, Member of Provincial Parliament for London West, and Terence Kernaghan, Member of Provincial Parliament for London North Centre, were among the over 300 people in attendance.
“This special open house opportunity is meant to be a fun experience where you were also learning about research,” explains Dr. Forchuk. “During this holiday season, we wanted to share our own gift of hope in the form of collaborative research that is making a real difference.”
See photos from the open house on Facebook.
Shocking number of heart attack patients suffer dangerous hemorrhage following heart attack
LONDON - A heart attack can be deadly, but there are effective lifesaving procedures if treated in time. The most common procedure is called reperfusion therapy, which is when the blocked coronary artery causing the heart attack is opened up and a stent is placed inside to let blood flow freely again.
In a recent published study by a multi-center research team at Lawson Health Research Institute, St. Joseph’s Health Care London and a number of other institutions across the globe, scientists examine a condition called reperfusion injury, a problem that can take place following reperfusion therapy.
“When you open up the coronary artery in someone experiencing a heart attack the blood starts to flow. However, we found there are a number of factors that lead to other injuries due to opening up the vessel,” explains Dr. Rohan Dharmakumar, Executive Director of the Krannert Cardiovascular Research Center at Indiana University. “Opening up the coronary artery, although lifesaving and necessary, can at times cause significant reperfusion injury which is a concept that had yet to be scientifically proven until now.”
For example, when the blocked coronary artery is opened up with reperfusion therapy the blood flowing into narrower vessels can cause the smaller vessels to burst and cause internal bleeding within the heart muscle, which is called myocardial hemorrhage.
“Those who experience a myocardial hemorrhage have a much larger piece of their heart muscle die than those who don’t have hemorrhage,” says Dr. Frank Prato, Program Lead of Lawson’s Imaging Research Program and Assistant Scientific Director at Lawson. “We have been able to show that if there is hemorrhage due to reperfusion injury, the size of the dead tissue within the heart grows, which then can ultimately lead to heart failure.”
After studying 70 patients with heart attacks, the research team was able to show reperfusion injury led to hemorrhage in excess of 50 per cent of patients who were being treated for a heart attack.
“The outcome isn’t immediate death, but heart failure that can start a few years after the heart attack,” says Dr. Dharmakumar. “So even though we are saving people initially from a heart attack, we are still losing a lot of people to heart failure within the first five years.”
This discovery was made possible through the use of Lawson’s cyclotron, a machine used to make isotopes for advanced PET/MRI scans at St. Joseph’s Health Care London.
“To validate the study with a PET/MRI we needed a specific radioactive isotope called nitrogen 13 ammonia,” explains Dr. Mike Kovacs, Scientist and Director of Lawson’s Cyclotron Facility. “We were able to create this isotope and went through Health Canada approval, so now we can use this not only in preclinical models but with human patients as well.”
The study has been published in the Journal of American College of Cardiology. The findings will now allow the research team to examine different forms of therapies that can be used in combination with reperfusion therapy to improve patient outcomes.
Senior Media Relations Consultant
Communications & Public Engagement
T: 519-685-8500 ext. 73502
Celine.zadorsky@lhsc.on.ca
Shocking number of heart attack patients suffer dangerous hemorrhage following lifesaving treatment, study shows
MEDIA RELEASE
For immediate release
February 10th, 2022
LONDON- A heart attack can be deadly, but there are effective lifesaving procedures if treated in time. The most common procedure is called reperfusion therapy, which is when the blocked coronary artery causing the heart attack is opened up and a stent is placed inside to let blood flow freely again.
In a recent published study by a multi-center research team at Lawson Health Research Institute, St. Joseph’s Health Care London and a number of other institutions across the globe, scientists examine a condition called reperfusion injury, a problem that can take place following reperfusion therapy.
“When you open up the coronary artery in someone experiencing a heart attack the blood starts to flow. However, we found there are a number of factors that lead to other injuries due to opening up the vessel,” explains Dr. Rohan Dharmakumar, Executive Director of the Krannert Cardiovascular Research Center at Indiana University. “Opening up the coronary artery, although lifesaving and necessary, can at times cause significant reperfusion injury which is a concept that had yet to be scientifically proven until now.”
For example, when the blocked coronary artery is opened up with reperfusion therapy the blood flowing into narrower vessels can cause the smaller vessels to burst and cause internal bleeding within the heart muscle, which is called myocardial hemorrhage.
“Those who experience a myocardial hemorrhage have a much larger piece of their heart muscle die than those who don’t have hemorrhage,” says Dr. Frank Prato, Program Lead of Lawson’s Imaging Research Program and Assistant Scientific Director at Lawson. “We have been able to show that if there is hemorrhage due to reperfusion injury, the size of the dead tissue within the heart grows, which then can ultimately lead to heart failure.”
After studying 70 patients with heart attacks, the research team was able to show reperfusion injury led to hemorrhage in excess of 50 per cent of patients who were being treated for a heart attack.
“The outcome isn’t immediate death, but heart failure that can start a few years after the heart attack,” says Dr. Dharmakumar. “So even though we are saving people initially from a heart attack, we are still losing a lot of people to heart failure within the first five years.”
This discovery was made possible through the use of Lawson’s cyclotron, a machine used to make isotopes for advanced PET/MRI scans at St. Joseph’s Health Care London.
“To validate the study with a PET/MRI we needed a specific radioactive isotope called nitrogen 13 ammonia,” explains Dr. Mike Kovacs, Scientist and Director of Lawson’s Cyclotron Facility. “We were able to create this isotope and went through Health Canada approval, so now we can use this not only in preclinical models but with human patients as well.”
The study has been published in the Journal of American College of Cardiology. The findings will now allow the research team to examine different forms of therapies that can be used in combination with reperfusion therapy to improve patient outcomes.
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ABOUT LAWSON HEALTH RESEARCH INSTITUTE
Lawson Health Research Institute is one of Canada’s top hospital-based research institutes, tackling the most pressing challenges in health care. As the research institute of London Health Sciences Centre and St. Joseph’s Health Care London, our innovation happens where care is delivered. Lawson research teams are at the leading-edge of science with the goal of improving health and the delivery of care for patients. Working in partnership with Western University, our researchers are encouraged to pursue their curiosity, collaborate often and share their discoveries widely. Research conducted through Lawson makes a difference in the lives of patients, families and communities around the world. To learn more, visit www.lawsonresearch.ca.
For more information, please contact:
Celine Zadorsky
Communications Consultant & External Relations
Lawson Health Research Institute
T: 519-685-8500 ext. 75664
C. 519-619-3872
@email
www.lawsonresearch.ca/news-events
Senior Media Relations Consultant
Communications & Public Engagement
T: 519-685-8500 ext. 73502
Celine.zadorsky@lhsc.on.ca
Showing the invisible: New research to help us see bacteria in the body
In recent years, research has increasingly shown us the importance of bacteria and other microbes in the human microbiome for maintaining health. Now, researchers at Lawson Health Research Institute are pioneering new imaging methods to see these microbes in the human body and open new avenues for health research. Early results of preclinical studies at Lawson have found positron emission tomography-magnetic resonance (PET/MR) imaging could allow the tracking and identification of bacteria inside the body and lead to more targeted use of antibiotic treatments.
Accurate targeting of antibiotic treatments can prevent antimicrobial resistance – when bacteria, viruses, fungi and parasites no longer respond to medication. According to a United Nations report, it is estimated that by 2050, antimicrobial resistance could result in 10 million deaths each year – more than cancer. New imaging research could be a gamechanger for treating bacterial infections by allowing us to see bacteria in the body using medical imaging equipment and then targeting the bacteria with specific therapies.
“Traditional imaging of infection means that you're looking at tissue damage; the bacteria have already started the process of inflammation and are wreaking havoc,” explains Dr. Donna Goldhawk, Lawson Scientist at St. Joseph’s Health Care London (St. Joseph’s). “Imaging bacteria catches the infection at an earlier stage. When you can image a particular species of bacteria, you can narrow the type of antibiotic that you might want to treat it with – reducing the need for broad-spectrum antibiotics that can lead to antimicrobial resistance.”
Imaging bacteria using PET/MR technology begins with attaching tracer molecules – also called isotopes – to specific bacteria in order to follow the movement of the microbes. A recent study from Lawson used PET/MR imaging to track bacteria labelled with an isotope called Zirconium-89 (89Zr) in a preclinical model. The researchers were able to demonstrate that PET/MR imaging could track ingested bacteria through the gut.
“Imaging of bacteria is a very new application of how PET/MR technology can be used. Using isotopes like 89Zr to label bacteria would allow you to image the same individual repeatedly and follow the ingestion of specific bacteria from the stomach through the digestive system since those isotopes last a long time,” adds Dr. Frank Prato, Scientist at Lawson and Lead of the Lawson Imaging research program.
This also has the potential to allow imaging of bacteria that migrate to other areas of the body like the brain, bladder, kidneys, and reproductive system. In the future, this technology could allow researchers to identify specific bacteria present and target those bacteria.
Similar research is underway to examine whether bacteria without tracers can also be tracked using MR imaging based on differences in their characteristics, like associations with specific metals. This could allow imaging of specific bacteria in the gut and how they respond when gut infections are treated with antibiotics, probiotics or microbial therapies like fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT).
With or without tracer molecules, both imaging methods could eventually become important for improving the efficacy and wider implementation of FMT, which introduces healthy microbes from donors into a patient’s gut with the goal of having the healthy bacteria reinstate a balanced microbiome. FMT is currently used to treat recurrent infections of C. diff. (Clostridium difficile), but new applications are expanding with clinical trials looking at its use to treat a variety of diseases, including certain forms of cancer. The ability to see how the balance of bacteria is changing could accelerate the development of effective new therapies.
While more research is needed, these studies are moving the monitoring of bacteria using PET/MR imaging closer to clinical implementation. The research has been made possible in part thanks to collaborations with Siemens Healthineers, Cubresa Inc. and London X-Ray Associates.
Simple CT scanning procedure can predict effectiveness of ovarian cancer treatment
Technology developed at Western University and Lawson Health Research Institute can provide a new window into whether or not patients are responding to treatment for advanced ovarian cancer. A multi-centre clinical trial has demonstrated that CT Perfusion, which measures blood flow and blood volume to tumours associated with ovarian cancer, can provide an accurate prediction of how well a treatment is working, allowing physicians the opportunity to better plan treatment. Funding for the trial was provided by the US National Cancer Institute through the National Clinical Trials Network including NRG Oncology and ECOG-ACRIN.
“CT perfusion is homing into the change in blood flow to the tumour before and after treatment,” said Ting-Yim Lee, professor at Western University’s Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry, scientist at Lawson Health Research Institute, and a Medical Physicist at St. Joseph’s Health Care London. “In this particular case we can see that blood flow tends to decrease in those who will survive longer without symptoms, whereas for those whose symptoms will recur within six months, we saw blood flow to the tumour increase after their treatment.”
The study was published in the journal, Clinical Cancer Research. Its authors point out that in 60 to 85 per cent of ovarian cancer patients, relapse will occur after initial treatment. By using CT perfusion to identify which patients are more likely to benefit from a specific therapy enables better patient selection and treatment planning, and also provides a biomarker for future clinical trials assessing new treatment options. The authors also point out that although the trial is promising, further studies are required to corroborate the current findings.
“Using this method we are able to see a change in the blood flow as early as four weeks after treatment. This means we don’t have to wait months to determine whether symptoms will recur, we are able to tell whether the treatment is effective much sooner,” said Lee.
Developed by Lee and his team at Western University’s Robarts Research Institute, CT perfusion uses X-ray dye in combination with existing CT scanners to measure blood flow. The technology is already used globally to assess blood flow to the brain after stroke. This clinical trial for use in ovarian cancer took place across 19 U.S. centres, and also demonstrated that the technology is easily implemented onto any existing CT scanner, and requires minimal training to be successful.
Small box holds big promise in cardiac care
London, Ontario – For a non-descript box it wields a mighty name and even more impressive possibilities for people with heart disease. Called the AngioDefender, the machine – no bigger than a shoebox - holds much promise in the ability to personalize cardiac care, say researchers at Lawson Health Research Institute, the research arm of St. Joseph’s Health Care London.
St. Joseph’s Hospital in London is the only Canadian cardiac rehabilitation centre testing the AngioDefender, a non-invasive tool that can assess the health of blood vessels by using a simple blood pressure cuff. At the recent Canadian Cardiovascular Congress in Toronto, Lawson researchers presented findings of their study, which assessed the feasibility and reliability of the AngioDefender in patients undergoing cardiac rehabilitation.
“Right now everyone basically gets similar treatment in terms of maximizing therapy based on risk factor profiles,” says Dr. Neville Suskin, Lawson scientist and medical director of St. Joseph’s Cardiac Rehabilitation and Secondary Prevention Program. “With this machine, if it does what we hope it will do, it gives us insight into a person’s vascular health so that we can know if the treatment is working and adjust and individualize their care.”
Also key, says Dr. Suskin, is the machine can be used by any medical professional in any doctor’s office.
The AngioDefender system, manufactured by Everist Health, measures the health of the endothelium — the interior lining of blood vessels. Using a blood pressure cuff, the device runs through a series of inflations and deflations to analyze the endothelium’s response to changes in blood flow. When the blood pressure cuff is inflated, blood flow decreases and stops. When the blood pressure cuff deflates, blood flow increases and the main artery in the arm responds by getting bigger (dilating). How well it dilates is a sign of endothelial (vascular) health.
Using a specially designed data analysis algorithm, the AngioDefender system produces each patient’s “flow-mediated dilation” score. When the information is combined with the patient’s other risk factors, it calculates the patient’s vascular age. The whole process takes 15 to 20 minutes.
“The ability for a health professional to obtain a measure of vascular health in such a straightforward manner is very novel” says Dr. Suskin, whose team has found that the machine is feasible to use in a busy cardiac rehabilitation practice setting. “It doesn’t take long, patients tolerate it, and they are also very keen to know their vascular health as determined by this machine.”
If successful, the device may become part of the standard screening to assess early-stage cardiovascular disease and atherosclerosis, and an innovative way to monitor the effectiveness of treatment.
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Lawson Health Research Institute is one of Canada’s top hospital-based research institutes, tackling the most pressing challenges in health care. As the research institute of London Health Sciences Centre and St. Joseph’s Health Care London, our innovation happens where care is delivered. Lawson research teams are at the leading-edge of science with the goal of improving health and the delivery of care for patients. Working in partnership with Western University, our researchers are encouraged to pursue their curiosity, collaborate often and share their discoveries widely. Research conducted through Lawson makes a difference in the lives of patients, families and communities around the world. To learn more, visit www.lawsonresearch.ca.
Renowned for compassionate care, St. Joseph’s Health Care London is a leading academic health care centre in Canada dedicated to helping people live to their fullest by minimizing the effects of injury, disease and disability through excellence in care, teaching and research. Through partnership with Lawson Health Research Institute and our collaborative engagement with other health care and academic partners, St. Joseph’s has become an international leader in the areas of: chronic disease management; medical imaging; specialized mental health care; rehabilitation and specialized geriatrics; and surgery. St. Joseph’s operates through a wide range of hospital, clinic and long-term and community-based settings, including: St. Joseph’s Hospital; Parkwood Institute; Mount Hope Centre for Long Term Care; and the Southwest Centre for Forensic Mental Health Care. www.sjhc.london.on.ca
Senior Media Relations Consultant
Communications & Public Engagement
T: 519-685-8500 ext. 73502
Celine.zadorsky@lhsc.on.ca
Smart Homes for community living
A first-of-its-kind research study by Lawson Health Research Institute is moving into the community and evaluating the use of smart technologies in the home for people with severe mental illness.
After prototyping this approach within a hospital setting through St. Joseph’s Health Care London, the research team will be outfitting eight affordable housing units at Canadian Mental Health Association Middlesex and London and Middlesex Community Housing with smart home technology.
In-hospital prototype for using smart technologies in the home
The Smart Home Community Model
“This solution is for people who are having difficulty managing their everyday life and need a high level of care to maintain community living,” says Dr. Cheryl Forchuk, Assistant Scientific Director at Lawson and project lead for the Smart Home Community Model. “Technology and applications are being embedded in the lived environment and then tested to ensure they are safe, secure and appropriate for use in health care.”
Dr. Cheryl Forchuk announcing this phase of the project, from within one of the apartment buildings.
Study participants will select from a wide range of tools that will best meet their individual needs. Devices such as smartphones and touch-screen monitors connect with applications to provide video-conferencing, questionnaires, and prompts and reminders based on the person’s care plan.
As an example, participants have regular access to mood scales with questions about how they are feeling. These are used extensively in mental health care settings to help address issues and start conversations with clients. The care team receives notification of the answers, giving regular insight into how the person is doing and if they need additional follow-up.
Depending on their needs, participants have access to automated medication dispensers and smart health monitoring devices, such as weigh scales, blood pressure monitors, glucometers, and tracking monitors for heart rate, activity and sleep.
This patient population often faces health challenges on multiple fronts, with higher rates of diabetes and cardiac issues. They can struggle keeping balance when it comes to activity, weight and sleep. Fluctuations in any of these can be early indicators that a crisis is looming.
“By integrating and testing these smart tools for health care, we are not simply looking at the technology but how it can be used as a tool for communication,” says Dr. Forchuk. “We see smart technology supporting more seamless communication between health care providers and the client – all from their own homes. This helps them better manage their care and overall wellbeing, flag issues earlier on and avoid trips to the clinic when appropriate.”
Paula's Perspective
Paula Rawlinson is chair of the family council and sits on the patient council for St. Joseph’s Parkwood Institute Mental Health Care. She personally has lived experience with mental health and as also acted as a caregiver for a family member.
“Both myself and my family member could have benefitted from these tools, very much so,” says Paula. “When I was really suffering, I isolated myself from people a lot. Even when I lived in a group home because I needed a higher level of care. Having some sort of helpful device right there, encouraging me to keep up with things and connecting me to someone I trusted, would have made a huge difference. Especially after the first discharge.”
She adds that for someone who is really struggling, this could be a life-saving strategy that makes a vital difference.
For her family member, Paula sees many uses for these tools and knows that they would actually use them. “I’ve been able to see the tools and they are even simpler than using email. It makes them accessible to a lot of people in the community who would make good use of them to improve their situation.”
Results and Impact
Some of the tools as part of this project have previously been tested formally as part of a research study and shown positive results.
The health team has access to the data to more easily stay in touch with the person. They can work together to track trends and pinpoint triggers, creating more personalized and effective strategies. With less focus on the daily aspects of care, providers reported that in-person meetings offered more meaningful and important discussions.
“All of the data is also viewable by the client who continues to work with a health care provider,” explains Dr. Forchuk. Clients can reach out sooner and get support more quickly. Potential issues and crisis are addressed earlier on, and in previous studies they reduced psychiatric readmissions, emergency room visits and arrests. Clients reported more satisfaction with their care and feeling better overall.
“When we have more people successfully achieving community living and managing their care with fewer outpatient visits and other service utilization, we can open up capacity in the system and deliver quality care at a lower cost.”
The team anticipates that participants will experience greater levels of independence and autonomy in maintaining housing and self-care for mental health and chronic illnesses.
Paul points out that one of the key outcomes is to avoid re-admission. “One of the main, recurring struggles is loneliness. With tools to keep people in more regular contact with their care team and assistance with their everyday life, they can shift more to having a fun life. You can build up those crucial relationships with family and friends – and those people feel less burnout as caregivers. It adds a lot of support and resiliency.”
Dr. Forchuk adds that “our approach is to care for the whole person – mind, body and soul. It goes beyond managing the mental illness and is about supporting people in managing their life.”
The team already has four people enrolled in the study. In addition to people living alone, they will have participants with roommates and families to test the strategy under various real-life situations. The initial study will take place over one year.
This phase of project has received generous funding from the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation. The Canadian Institutes for Health Research contributed to the initial pilot phase.
Smart technology in the home effective for supporting mental health care, study finds
A research team from Lawson Health Research Institute has announced promising results from a one-of-a-kind demonstration study that evaluated the use of smart technologies in the home for people with severe mental illness.
“Our Smart Homes solution is for people who are having difficulty managing their everyday life and need a high level of care to maintain community living,” says Dr. Cheryl Forchuk, Assistant Scientific Director at Lawson and project lead for Smart Home Community Model Phase.
“We have strong initial evidence showing that technology and applications embedded in the lived environment are safe, secure and appropriate for use in health care.”
After prototyping this approach within a hospital setting through St. Joseph’s Health Care London, the research team outfitted affordable housing units at Canadian Mental Health Association (CMHA) Elgin-Middlesex and London and Middlesex Community Housing (LMCH) with smart home technology.
The team presented the full study results during a virtual event.
There were 13 participants as part of this project phase who had different living situations such as individual apartments, group homes or family homes. Anxiety, mood and psychotic disorders were the most common mental health diagnoses, with many also suffering from chronic pain that make the activities of daily life difficult.
Each study participant selected from a wide range of tools that would best meet their individual needs, with all but one participant selecting more than one tool. Devices such as smartphones and touch-screen monitors connect with applications to provide video-conferencing, questionnaires, and prompts and reminders based on the person’s care plan. They also had access to automated medication dispensers and smart health monitoring devices for tracking heart rate, activity and sleep.
“All of the data is viewable by both the client and health care provider, allowing for more seamless care and identification of issues earlier on,” adds Dr. Forchuk.
The study found that visits to a health or social service provider and the emergency department decreased, as did home visits from a provider. Telephone appointments increased and communication between the client and provider were enhanced. Almost 80 per cent of the participants felt that the technologies improved their health care overall.
Higher levels of community integration and a greater sense of independence were also reported, including a better ability to remain connected with friends and family during the pandemic. When medication dispensers were used, no medication doses were missed. Participants felt they were better able to track their own health and more motivated to lead healthier lives.
“The compliment of smart technology in our Supportive Independent Living Program has proven to improve the quality of life of participants by reducing use of emergency services and fostering learning opportunities for independent living skills to create a good quality of life,” says Nedrita Shemshedini, Manager of Supportive Independent Living at CMHA Elgin-Middlesex. “In a large-scale rollout, this model could improve wellbeing and empower persons to better manage their care.”
The research team hopes this work will help inform the integration of smart technology more fully into mental health care delivery. Laura Pearson, Executive Director at Ontario Peer Development Initiative, urges that “there is a need for key policies to be addressed and changed in order to support funding and access for technology at a system level for the purpose of mental health care.”
The community model phase of the Smart Homes project was generously funded by the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC).
Smart technology in the home effective for supporting mental health care, study finds
LONDON, ON – A research team from Lawson Health Research Institute has announced promising results from a one-of-a-kind demonstration study that evaluated the use of smart technologies in the home for people with severe mental illness.
“Our Smart Homes solution is for people who are having difficulty managing their everyday life and need a high level of care to maintain community living,” says Dr. Cheryl Forchuk, Assistant Scientific Director at Lawson and project lead for Smart Home Community Model Phase. “We have strong initial evidence showing that technology and applications embedded in the lived environment are safe, secure and appropriate for use in health care.”
After prototyping this approach within a hospital setting through St. Joseph’s Health Care London, the research team outfitted affordable housing units at Canadian Mental Health Association (CMHA) Elgin-Middlesex and London and Middlesex Community Housing (LMCH) with smart home technology.
There were 13 participants as part of this project phase who had different living situations such as individual apartments, group homes or family homes. Anxiety, mood and psychotic disorders were the most common mental health diagnoses, with many also suffering from chronic pain that make the activities of daily life difficult.
“More and more, smart technologies like phone applications or virtual care are being used for mental health care. A smart home solution like the one we have tested could be considered a higher dose of technology, offered to clients with higher needs. The right dose for one may not work for another – the technological solutions used should vary depending on the individual,” explains Dr. Forchuk.
Each study participant selected from a wide range of tools that would best meet their individual needs, with all but one participant selecting more than one tool. Devices such as smartphones and touch-screen monitors connect with applications to provide video-conferencing, questionnaires, and prompts and reminders based on the person’s care plan. They also had access to automated medication dispensers and smart health monitoring devices for tracking heart rate, activity and sleep.
“All of the data is viewable by both the client and health care provider, allowing for more seamless care and identification of issues earlier on,” adds Dr. Forchuk.
The study found that visits to a health or social service provider and the emergency department decreased, as did home visits from a provider. Telephone appointments increased and communication between the client and provider were enhanced. Almost 80 per cent of the participants felt that the technologies improved their health care overall.
Higher levels of community integration and a greater sense of independence were also reported, including a better ability to remain connected with friends and family during the pandemic. When medication dispensers were used, no medication doses were missed. Participants felt they were better able to track their own health and more motivated to lead healthier lives.
“The compliment of smart technology in our Supportive Independent Living Program has proven to improve the quality of life of participants by reducing use of emergency services and fostering learning opportunities for independent living skills to create a good quality of life,” says Nedrita Shemshedini, Manager of Supportive Independent Living at CMHA Elgin-Middlesex. “In a large-scale rollout, this model could improve wellbeing and empower persons to better manage their care.”
The research team hopes this work will help inform the integration of smart technology more fully into mental health care delivery. Laura Pearson, Executive Director at Ontario Peer Development Initiative, urges that “there is a need for key policies to be addressed and changed in order to support funding and access for technology at a system level for the purpose of mental health care.”
The community model phase of the Smart Homes project was generously funded by the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC).
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Lawson Health Research Institute is one of Canada’s top hospital-based research institutes, tackling the most pressing challenges in health care. As the research institute of London Health Sciences Centre and St. Joseph’s Health Care London, our innovation happens where care is delivered. Lawson research teams are at the leading-edge of science with the goal of improving health and the delivery of care for patients. Working in partnership with Western University, our researchers are encouraged to pursue their curiosity, collaborate often and share their discoveries widely. Research conducted through Lawson makes a difference in the lives of patients, families and communities around the world. To learn more, visit www.lawsonresearch.ca.
Senior Media Relations Consultant
Communications & Public Engagement
T: 519-685-8500 ext. 73502
Celine.zadorsky@lhsc.on.ca