Robotic exoskeletons improve motor function in adolescents with acquired brain injury
A team of New Jersey researchers has shown that gait training using robotic exoskeletons improved motor function in adolescents and young adults with acquired brain injury. The article, Kinetic gait changes after robotic exoskeleton training in adolescents and young adults with acquired brain injury , was published October 28, 2020 in
Applied Bionics and Biomechanics.
The authors are Kiran Karunakaran, PhD, Naphtaly Ehrenberg, MS, and Karen Nolan, PhD, from the Center for Mobility and Rehabilitation Engineering Research at Kessler Foundation, and JenFu Cheng, MD, and Katherine Bentley, MD, from Children s Specialized Hospital. Drs. Karunakaran, Nolan, Cheng, and Bentley are also affiliated with the Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation at Rutgers New Jersey Medical School.
COVID-19 news: Pa , N J coronavirus cases, deaths rise; vaccine, stimulus updates
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Governor Murphy Marks Historic Beginning Of New Jersey s COVID-19 Vaccination Effort
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UpdatedTue, Dec 15, 2020 at 9:48 am ET
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The other hospitals who got the Pfizer vaccine in the first round are Hackensack University Medical Center, University Health in Newark, AtlantiCare Regional Medical Center in Atlantic City and Cooper University Hospital in Camden. (Google Earth)
NEW BRUNSWICK, NJ The main campus of Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital in New Brunswick is among the first batch of hospitals in the state to receive Pfizer s coronavirus vaccine.
The state of New Jersey has 76,050 doses of the Pfizer vaccine to give in the first round.
The other hospitals who got it in the first round are University Health in Newark (also part of the RWJ-Barnabas network), Hackensack University Medical Center, Morristown Medical Center, AtlantiCare Regional Medical Center in Atlantic City and Cooper University Hospital in Camden. All have arctic-level, subzero freezers in place to store the vaccines.