Occupational Therapy Assistant student takes first place in statewide competition for adaptive equipment


woman smilingVirginia Barnes, an Occupational Therapy Assistant student at Ļć½¶Šć, was awarded first place in the 2021 North Carolina Occupational Therapy Association’s Assistive Technology/Adaptive Equipment Competition earlier this month.

The competition called for proposals from occupational therapy students throughout the state to design physical assistive technology or adaptive equipment designs.

Barnes developed a hand-stabilizing resistance disc to promote the use of spontaneous non-dominant hand use in children with cerebral palsy and children struggling with hand-dominance.

She was inspired to create the adaptive device after working with a young boy with cerebral palsy that had hand-dominance issues and low core strength.

ā€œHe was focused on using only his favored hand and ignoring the much-needed therapeutic use of his more frustrating, spontaneous hand function,ā€ she said. ā€œI had the idea for the resistance disc to keep his ā€˜good hand’ out of the way and working so his other hand could have more turns to explore his toys while also strengthening his core by bearing weight.ā€

Barnes was notified that she won on social media.

ā€œI was in complete disbelief when I found out. I’m so grateful for the support that my family, cohort, and instructors gave me for this project. They all had a special part to play in this event coming into my life,ā€ she said.

Christine Gunnigle, Director of the Occupational Therapy Assistant program at Ļć½¶Šć, describes Barnes as a dedicated student with a creative mind.

person with disc under legā€œVirginia voluntarily entered the assistive technology competition during such a busy semester, and we are so excited she won,ā€ Gunnigle said. ā€œWe are proud of her hard work and celebrate this accomplishment with her.ā€

Barnes decided to pursue occupational therapy after making regular visits to an OT/PT clinic herself to recover from being a collegiate athlete.

ā€œI thought, ā€˜what a great place to work,’ so here I am,ā€ she said. ā€œPursuing occupational therapy is a lifelong goal of honoring all of those who helped train me for this journey, including my son with Autism and my father, who I was honored to care for during the last years of his life.ā€

Barnes expects to graduate in May 2022, continue working at Extivita, a hyperbaric oxygen therapy clinic in Durham, and further her studies in occupational therapy.

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Contact Marcy Gardner, Content and Social Media Coordinator, at gardnerm@durhamtech.edu