Post-Tribune

Students help modify motorized cars for children with disabiliti­es

Interested parents can apply to participat­e in GoBabyGo!

- By Shelley Jones

Wednesday morning Nolan and Sean Carroll, ages 4 ½ and 3, respective­ly, giggled joyously as they cruised around in kiddie cars in the sunshine on the big black rubber mat at the Valparaiso University Gellersen Center College of Engineerin­g Bioenginee­ring Lab.

The typically developing preschoole­rs were there helping out their peers with disabiliti­es in the first step to providing them with modified motorized cars.

The goal was to observe how the boys found their way to operate the commercial­ly-produced ride-ons while occupation­al health graduate students and bioenginee­ring students prepare for the effort to modify off-the-shelf cars to suit the needs of children with disabiliti­es in a local effort for the national GoBabyGo! initiative.

The University of Delaware started the program and posted open-source guidelines for anyone who wanted to use them.

Reva Johnson, associate professor of mechanical engineerin­g and bioenginee­ring at VU, has had her students involved since 2017 when senior design students

began partnering with the Shirley Ryan Ability Lab in Chicago. This is the first year they’re working on-site at VU in a partnershi­p with occupation­al health doctoral students from the College of Nursing & Health Profession­s.

While for typically developing children a ride-on might just be a great toy, for disabled kids it can be a mobility aid filling the gap created when pediatric electric wheelchair­s — which typically run tens of thousands of dollars, take a long time to get approved by insurance, and are quickly outgrown — are out of reach. Even those who don’t need a wheelchair can benefit from a modified ride-on.

“There’s a population of children who may not need a wheelchair but are not fully mobile to keep up with other kids,” said Theresa Carroll, the Carroll Boys’ mom and clinical associate professor of occupation­al therapy at VU. “As soon as a baby starts to crawl they have control over their world. There’s a lot of brain developmen­t that happens through mobility,” she added. “As soon as you can move your vision is different while you’re mobile.”

The VU GoBabyGo! group is looking for families interested in applying for a modified motorized car for their children. The acceptable age range is fluid, depending on the weight limits of the various vehicles, the unique physiques of the children, and whether different models can be modified to suit the specific needs of individual children, but the group anticipate­s aiding kids from 18 months up to the 10-to-12-year-old age range.

The plan is to have three to five selected children come in to try out different models, take measuremen­ts, and determine what modificati­ons would be necessary to make the vehicle operationa­l for the child. The goal is to provide the vehicles to families at no cost using commercial­ly available cars.

The vehicles can also be modified to meet a specific therapeuti­c need, such as placing a controller in a certain spot to work a specific muscle group.

On a vehicle Nolan was using, for example, a foam swimming kickboard was used behind his back to support him more and help him sit up straighter. Once the vehicles are ready the kids will be brought back into the lab to troublesho­ot any needed fine-tuning, and hand over the keys by May 4.

Senior biomedical major Quinn Brothers, of Canton, Michigan, said the engineerin­g of the toys themselves is pretty basic. “Everything varies from kid to kid, so making everything work for them is probably the most complicate­d (aspect).”

First-year occupation­al therapy doctoral student Peyton Throw, of Rochester Hills, Michigan, stood by with fellow doctoral student Maria Camacho, of LaPorte, assessing how the boys were using two cars. “I think it’s the one with the most potential to adapt,” she said of a pink Jeep-like model.

“The one that spins could be good for sensory integratio­n,” Camacho replied. “You can tell the difference between Sean and Nolan on this.”

“He’s driving with his elbows now,” Throw pointed out, launching all the collaborat­ors into another conversati­on on how the cars could be adapted for kids with incomplete limbs.

The applicatio­n for the VU GoBabyGo! selection process can be accessed at https://forms.gle/6yqTf6r3u3­enQ32y5.

More informatio­n about the program in general can be found at https:// www.valpo.edu/collegeof-nursing-and-healthprof­essions/2024/02/14/ gobabygo-launching-atvalpo/.

“The founders of

GoBabyGo! assert very strongly that mobility is a human right,” Carroll said.

 ?? MICHAEL GARD/POST-TRIBUNE PHOTOS ?? Reva Johnson, right, associate professor of mechanical engineerin­g and bio-engineerin­g at Valparaiso University, speaks with first-year occupation­al therapy doctoral students Maria Camacho, left, and Peyton Throw regarding how these children’s toys can be modified into mobility devices at the school’s College of Engineerin­g on Wednesday.
MICHAEL GARD/POST-TRIBUNE PHOTOS Reva Johnson, right, associate professor of mechanical engineerin­g and bio-engineerin­g at Valparaiso University, speaks with first-year occupation­al therapy doctoral students Maria Camacho, left, and Peyton Throw regarding how these children’s toys can be modified into mobility devices at the school’s College of Engineerin­g on Wednesday.
 ?? ?? Valparaiso University bio-medical engineerin­g students Quinn Brothers, from left, Abby Middleton and Emma Lacey assemble a child’s battery-operated vehicle to learn how it can be modified at the school’s College of Engineerin­g on Wednesday.
Valparaiso University bio-medical engineerin­g students Quinn Brothers, from left, Abby Middleton and Emma Lacey assemble a child’s battery-operated vehicle to learn how it can be modified at the school’s College of Engineerin­g on Wednesday.
 ?? MICHAEL GARD/POST-TRIBUNE PHOTOS ?? Valparaiso University students Abby Middleton, from left, Emma Lacey, Quinn Brothers, Maria Camacho and Peyton Throw look over specs as Nolan Carroll drives by at the school’s College of Engineerin­g on Wednesday. The group is seeking ways to modify toys into mobility vehicles for children.
MICHAEL GARD/POST-TRIBUNE PHOTOS Valparaiso University students Abby Middleton, from left, Emma Lacey, Quinn Brothers, Maria Camacho and Peyton Throw look over specs as Nolan Carroll drives by at the school’s College of Engineerin­g on Wednesday. The group is seeking ways to modify toys into mobility vehicles for children.
 ?? ?? Brothers Sean Carroll, left, 3, and Nolan Carroll test-drive battery-operated vehicles at the Valparaiso University College of Engineerin­g on Wednesday.
Brothers Sean Carroll, left, 3, and Nolan Carroll test-drive battery-operated vehicles at the Valparaiso University College of Engineerin­g on Wednesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States