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Wii-HABILITATION AT THE VA HOSPITAL -- "I think it's
good for hand-eye coordination, but good for
the mind as well. It builds up confidence."

Shallum Pendergast, 10, helps out her
dad Alvis Burns with the Nintendo Wii controller as he plays a
hunting game while daughter Rebecca Burns, 7, watches at the Bob
Stump VA Medical Center Wednesday morning in Prescott. The Nintendo
Wii entertainment system is useful in recreational therapy. (photo:
The Daily Courier / Matt Hinshaw) |
For more about veterans and the Wii video game,
use the VA Watchdog search engine...click here...
http://www.yourvabenefits.org/sessearch.php?q=wii&op=and
Story here...
http://www.dcourier.com/Main.asp?SectionID=1&ArticleID=52318
Story below:
-------------------------
VA hospital employs video game as exercise aid
Wii the people
By Derek Meurer
The Daily Courier
Every day in the dining room of the Bob Stump VA
Medical Center's Extended Care and Rehabilitation Center, veterans play
golf, tennis, or enjoy a game of bowling.
The sports are simulations of their real-life counterparts that the
veterans play on the Nintendo Wii, but the exercise, and the enjoyment, is
real.
"I was skeptical at first," said Bill Powell, an ECRC patient. "But, I was
always a sports fan. I used to play all these sports, and this is a lot
like the real thing."
Article continues below:
(use left/right arrows in screen to view more videos)
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Powell enjoys playing Wii Sports, the collection
of sports mini-games that comes bundled with the Wii console, despite his
physical limitations. Though he uses a wheelchair for mobility and has
full use of only one arm, Powell is able to play many of the Wii games
that require only the use one hand.
"The Wii is a great tool for our patients, it is great therapy," said Ann
Marie Love,
recreation therapist. "With many games you don't need much of a range of
motion to enjoy them and benefit from them. It's great because it gets
people moving, actually doing something."
Leo Noble, an ECRC patient, agreed, saying he had never enjoyed video
games that are just "pushing buttons," but that the immersive nature of
Wii gameplay has him hooked.
"I think it's good for hand-eye coordination, but good for the mind as
well," Noble said. "It builds up confidence. It's been so long since I've
tried anything new. A lot of people here are shy about trying it, that
takes a lot of encouragement, but once they try it, they've enjoyed it,
like I have."
Paula Moran, the VA hospital's Supervisor for Recreation Therapy, said the
VA now has two Wii systems, one at the ECRC and one at the VA's
Domiciliary. She said she was surprised at how quickly the patients took
to the system, and impressed with its function in encouraging exercise and
mobility.
"It's fun, and that makes the most difference," Moran said. "With most
exercise, it's just exercise, but with Wii, it's sports, it's fun, it's
exciting. We've had the old Nintendo (Entertainment System) years ago, but
it was never this popular, and it wasn't really the kind of exercise the
patients needed. This, though, this is great."
While the Wii games at the ECRC are usually more tame, at the domiciliary
the "competition has been fierce," Moran said.
"Watch this strike," Willie Calloway, a retired Marine at the Domiciliary
said, as he made a precise sweep of the arm with the Wii's
motion-sensitive controller during a game of bowler. "I've done two 300
games, so far. This is great for me, mentally. When I'm stressed, I can
come down here, and let it out with the Wii."
Calloway has been playing the Wii for 5 months, and said he has loved
every minute of it. He said the Wii has made the Domiciliary a much more
lively place, and that he plans to buy a Wii of his own, at some point.
"It keeps people entertained, and it can keep the kids busy," Calloway
said. "It's even something you can do with kids. I know I'll have to get
one. I'll always have something to do with my free time."
Donald Giovannetti, another retired marine staying at the Domiciliary,
said he can play only a couple of games at a time because of his
arthritis, but that it still provides a fun substitute for the sports that
he can no longer participate in.
"In Wii bowling, I'm lucky to break 100 right now, but I couldn't lift a
real bowling ball now, thanks to my arthritis," Giovannetti said. "I'll
buy one. I'd rather play this any day than some 'click click' computer
game. Here, you're really doing something."
-------------------------
posted by Larry
Scott
Founder and Editor
VA Watchdog dot Org
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