Scoping Review
Glegg, S.M.N., Tatla, S.K. & Holstii, L., Disability and Rehabilitation Assistive Technology 2014, 9(2); 89 – 111
Link to abstract:
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23713408
Objective: This scoping review examines research literature with quantitative data specific to the GestureTek virtual reality system used in physical and cognitive rehabilitation. The purpose of this scoping review is to determine the practicality of a systematic review, to identify areas for further research, “…and to allow therapists to be able to seek out readily pertinent evidence to support their clinical decisions about their use of the technology”.
Method: An explicit search strategy was used, resulting in 44 included studies mostly relating to stroke. For cerebral palsy, five studies were reported with evidence level I, II or III: one single case study reported level III evidence for balance and mobility improvement, and another single case reported level I evidence for improved reach, by American Academy for Cerebral Palsy and Developmental Medicine criteria.
Findings: Few strong quality or high level evidence studies are available: lack of common outcome measures limits the possibility of a systematic review. High level, larger studies are needed. This scoping review provides a database of rated studies related to cerebral palsy habilitation and outcomes of balance, mobility and upper extremity improvement.