The present invention relates to an apparatus for the self-feeding of disabled or elderly people.
Many devices and apparatuses are known aiming at restoring a certain degree of independence in the process of eating to people with various levels of disability. They range from low-tech solutions such as the device commercially known as “Eatery” to robotic hi-tech solutions such as the apparatuses sold under the names “Handy 1” and “My Spoon”. Their specific design goals differ from one case to another one. In some cases the aim is to provide a low-cost and easily manufactured device or a portable, small and easy-to-use device. In other cases attention has been paid to the modularity and adaptability to the user needs. Other differences among the various devices proposed till now concern their user interface, their control structure, their mechanical form and artifacts, and their levels of user involvement in the device operation. In general, the self-feeding apparatuses both of the commercial type and research prototypes can be categorized into two main groups: body-controlled feeders (i.e. controlled by a user's body part such as the mouth, a hand, a foot), wherein the user controls directly all the steps of the eating process, and automatically controlled feeders, wherein the user activate a switch or some type of mechanism to initiate all or part of a pre-programmed eating cycle.
Automatic feeders are mechanically more complex, with simple to complex embedded electronics and control systems, and automate a part of, or all of, the process of selecting, getting a portion of food and offering it to the user. Usually, the feeders use a spoon utensil to scoop the food and some mechanism to transport the food-filled utensil to a predetermined position where the user can eat it. Often users must at least have the capacity to move body and/or head forward to take food off the spoon and must be cognitively able to differentiate between the switches. The advantage of these powered feeders is in their ability to allow users with more severe disability to operate them with minimum effort and with any residual movement available. The disadvantage is in their increased mechanical and electrical complexity, which results in a feeding device with greater safety risks to the user.
The most common automatic feeders are the Arm Feeders which often have 1 or 2 degree-of freedom mechanical arms with a tool attachment that can be lowered to a movable plate or bowl to scoop food and raised to a fixed position at the height of the user's mouth. Three commercial examples of Arm Feeders are the Winsford feeder, the Neater Eater feeder and the ADD (Assistance Dining Device) feeder. These feeders are equipped with arm mechanisms that are able to get food from one location only and as such it is required to provide for a degree of freedom (DOF) in the food container. Therefore, the typical Arm Feeder has a total of 3 DOF: 2 DOF in the arm and 1 DOF in the rotating or translating plate. For example, the 2 DOF arm of the ADD feeder rotates to scoop food from one of the three food bowls that have been rotated into position to allow the arm have access to the food and, later, translates to offer the food to the user. On the other hand, the arm of the Neater Eater feeder rotates downwardly under a 2 DOF cable drive mechanism to scoop food from a plate that has been rotated to access to food in a specific position on the plate and, later, rotates upwardly to offer the food.
Robotic Feeders can be categorized as more sophisticated Arm Feeders. They are designed with servo-controlled arms with higher degrees of freedom (3 to 6 DOF). Unlike the regular arm feeders, they do not require a moving food container since their increased DOF's permit them more flexible methods for retrieving the food from the plate. Two examples of alternate food retrieval methods can be seen in the 4 DOF, Handy 1 Robot, which scoops food with a flat-tipped spoon from one of seven compartments of a fixed plate, and the 5 DOF, My Spoon Robot, which grasps solid food with a spoon and fork hand mechanism from compartments in a Japanese lunch box. Also, as a result of higher DOF, some of these robotic systems are able to offer users the ability to perform other self-care activities of daily living (ADLs) in addition to feeding. Examples of these are the 6 DOF, DeVAR prototype system that permits users to shave and brush their teeth and the Handy 1 commercial system that permits users to make-up their face.
The MySpoon robotic feeding system (marketed by the Japanese company Secom Co. Ltd.) is the system that implements the more flexible arm mechanism in a small non-invasive package. It has implemented a novel mechanism for selecting particular pieces of food. On the other hand, the Neater Eater (of the English company Neater Solutions Ltd.) has the more flexible and modular system that allows it to serve a large variety of users. The fact that the system is modular means that it is easily reconfigurable (e.g. the arm can be separated from the base and the end-effectors can be replaced). The possibility of using regular plate and spoon makes it more familiar. Finally, the ADD (of the US company Meal Time Partners, corresponding to U.S. Pat. No. 5,282,711) has the best system for handling semi-liquid and liquid substances with minimum spills, a very flexible system for presenting food to the user and a very safe, force-feedback system governing the interaction of the device with the user.
Other types of automatic feeders are also known that do not have an arm configuration. For example, the devices according to U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,162,868 and 4,624,613 comprise mechanisms with one or two degrees of freedom with a spoon that translate to scoop and dispense food at a fixed position close to the user's mouth. Food is moved by another mechanism on the spoon. According to U.S. Pat. No. 4,162,868 a cam mechanism moves food in the spoon dispensing it to the user. According to U.S. Pat. No. 4,624,613 pressurized food is dispensed in a pneumatically moved spoon.
Despite their effectiveness the commercially available self-feeders for disabled people are still not being utilized in large numbers. As a matter of fact, these are still too expensive, too difficult to use, unreliable, inconvenient, difficult to transport, unattractive and too time-consuming in set up. It has been noticed that, even in those case wherein the operating effectiveness is higher, they are unable to meet the needs of users with minimum head and trunk control, i.e. with the most severe disability degree.
The main purpose of the present invention is to provide an apparatus for the self-feeding of disabled users and elderly people, that would be capable of operating both at a base level to perform the function of assistant for the feeding of people with severe spine lesions and at an higher level to involve the user in the feeding process focusing on her/his residual abilities and offering opportunities for the rehabilitation and diagnosis.
A particular object of the present invention is to provide an apparatus of the above mentioned type capable of meeting several functional needs in the feeding field and usable by various user types (severely disabled people, elderly persons, children).
A further object of the present invention is to provide an apparatus of the above mentioned type that, contrary to the commercially available apparatuses, would be featured by a non-invasive, familiar appearance, such that of an household appliance, being able, inter alia, to use regular plates and cutlery.
Still another object of the present invention is to provide an apparatus of the above mentioned type that would be of the easily transportable type and usable in different situation, also thanks to an autonomous battery power source.
An additional object of the present invention is to provide an apparatus of the above mentioned type wherein the user would be able to select the requested function through a mouth-actuated device through which liquids and semisolid food can be fed as an usual drinking straw.
These objects are achieved with the apparatus for the self-feeding of disabled users and elderly people whose essential features are set forth in claim 1.
Other features and advantages, of the apparatus for the self-feeding of disabled users and elderly people will be apparent by the following description of an exemplifying, non-limiting embodiment made with reference to the attached drawings.
In the drawings:
With reference to
With reference to
Likewise, the arm 5 comprises internally an elongated support 20 on which a rail 21 and a rack 22 are mounted. A carriage 23 of a ball linear guide is mounted on rail 21 and a DC motor 24 arranged transversely to rail 21 is fixed to carriage 23. A pinion 25 engaged with rack 22 is fixed to the drive shaft of motor 24. The support 20 is fixed to a bracket 27 integral to carriage 17 of the linear guide arranged in the arm 3 through a pivot 26 passing through a longitudinal slot 27 formed along arm 3. A fourth arm 28 extending perpendicularly out of second arm 5 through a slot 29 formed longitudinally on the second arm 5 is fixed to the carriage 23 of the linear guide arranged on the second arm 5. The fourth arm 28 is provided with a connection 30 for the spoon 7 or other cutlery. The position of the connection 30 can be adjusted axially along the arm 28 by means of a locking knob 31. The arm 28 is connected to connection 30 through an elastic joint 49 fit for providing the food scooping utensil with the suitable stiffness to allow to scoop and transport food from the plate and at the same time, fit for taking up sudden impacts without damaging the apparatus or injuring the disabled users. Thanks to the elastic joint 49 the system can provide a reaction both in the direction perpendicular to the food container, thus avoiding the spoon to break off against the container, and in the longitudinal direction, thus avoiding strong impacts against the mouth of the disabled user, as far as a maximum deformation beyond which an overload device is activated to take up any additional load.
The plate bearing device, which the apparatus is equipped of, the apparatus is shown in greater detail in
In the present embodiment of the invention two tanks 50 and 51 (schematically shown in
The mouth operated control 11, set at the end of the flexible tube 10 and shown in detail in
A block diagram showing the interaction of the various components of the system (control 11, two degree-of-freedom spoon motion system integrated with plate motion system, liquid dispenser and control panel 12) is shown in
A block diagram of the liquid dispensing unit is shown in
The block diagram of the spoon motion system is shown in
The feeding cycle comprises a step in which the second arm 5 moves towards the plate, or other open food container, placed on the plate holder 9 with the spoon 7 at the distal end-of-stroke position of the arm 5. The spoon 7 then moves along the second arm 5 towards its proximal end-of-stroke position to scoop food in the plate. To this point the second arm 5 start to slide going up along the first arm 3 until it reaches the free end of arm 3 leading the spoon 7 at the height of the user's mouth. When the spoon comes back towards the plate, the plate holder 9 performs an angular displacement of a prefixed angle to allow the spoon to collect food in a different sector of the plate. By means of an initial calibration procedure the above movements can be adjusted in an optimal way, as well as the rotation type (continuous or intermittent), the rotation width, the spoon position (plate bottom or plate edge).
Advantageously the apparatus according to the invention is equipped with a resistor (not shown) embedded in the rotary plate holder, by which food can be kept warm all over the user meal.
Furthermore, the apparatus according to the invention is equipped with a push-button alarm device for an aid request in case of choking, by which all the system motors are switched off.
The self-feeding apparatus for disabled people according to the invention has a familiar look, typical of a household appliance, and is designed to use regular plates and cutlery. It is not very noisy and of such low dimensions as to be placed on a table, a bed or a wheel chair. It is portable and light, easy to handle and dismount, battery powdered, water proof and easy to clean (some of its components can be washed in a dishwashing machine).
The apparatus according to the invention is also easy to program and calibrate through automatic or servo guided movements, so as to be easily usable by several user in Rehabilitation Centers and is designed especially to stimulate the active participation (physiatric training during feeding) of the user.
The apparatus according to the invention can perform the requested tasks with continuity and in a time comparable to the human gesture of feeding, enabling the user to choose when and what to eat by rotating the plate and to drink without the aid of an assistant or simply to autonomously feed himself or herself by intake of liquid food.
In the apparatus according to the embodiment shown in the
Set up buttons for the apparatus calibration and LED's 108 indicating the on/off condition of the system, the battery charge status and the calibration conditions (i.e. they indicate when the calibration menu is active and when the two scooping positions of the spoon have been saved) are also available on casing 102a. On the casing 102b there are available LED's 109 indicating the on/off condition and the battery charge status as well as a trimmer, not shown, to vary the pump speed. The operating start of the apparatus is obtained through a push-button connected via a jack, not shown, placed in the rear part of casing 102a.
Various modifications and alteration to the invention may be appreciated based on a review of the disclosure. These changes and additions are intended to be within the scope and spirit of the invention as defined by the following claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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FI2005A000117 | May 2005 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IT2006/000397 | 5/26/2006 | WO | 00 | 11/27/2007 |