What are the advantages over other treatments for chronic pain?
Rittner: Patients could do these exercises at home without having to visit the physical therapy practice or the pain clinic. VR enables us to manage exercises differently. We also think it is easier to exercise in a VR environment as patients also have access to changing settings when they train at home. It also increases motivation.
Having said that, I also believe we humans are social beings and need social interaction. We can combine this factor with VR. For example, the exercises are recorded at home and therapists telemonitor progress remotely. In doing so, patients do not have to stop by the office several times a week. Instead, they only need to schedule an in-person visit every four weeks, yet still benefit from top remote patient monitoring.
The project has just started. What are your next steps?
Rittner: After a final research literature review related to the subject, we plan to design the VR environment that will subsequently be tested with healthy subjects and patients with back pain as part of a feasibility study. The next funding stage would then entail a comparative clinical study in which we would delve into parameters such as pain reduction or functional improvement in comparison to standard treatment.
ReliefVR is an exciting development project and not as restricted as a clinical trial. We have plenty of room to explore the type of VR environment we want to create. The project was inspired by the "Gesellschaft der Ideen" (English: Society of Ideas) competition launched by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research. Along the way, we were introduced to Ms. Yevgeniya Nedilko, initiator and ideator. We at the University Hospital Würzburg contribute expertise in the areas of medicine, physical therapy, and psychology, and our partners at videoreality GmbH are esteemed VR professionals. It is such an enriching experience.