Betrokken bij de ontwikkeling en evaluatie van revalidatietechnologie ((soft)robotica, exoskeletten), waarbij de gebruiker(context) altijd centraal staat.
Roessingh Research and Development (RRD) is an impact lab for personalized health technology within the context of movement (rehabilitation and sports) and health management (chronic disorders and healthy ageing). RRD provides scientific research on innovative healthcare technology with an end-user focus. We use the needs of the end-user as a starting point in the development of technology and ensure that the technology fits the healthcare context. So that technology is actually and optimally used and contributes to sustainable healthcare.
Roessingh Research and Development is part of Roessingh Center for Rehabilitation, one of the largest rehabilitation centres in the Netherlands, and has strong links with the University of Twente. This offers RRD a unique combination of scientific, technological and clinical knowledge. In addition, our cooperation network consists of healthcare institutions, patient associations, developers of healthcare technology and knowledge institutes.
RRD has extensive experience in many aspects of the development of innovative technology-supported health and care services; from initial scenario development and requirements elicitation with all stakeholders, technology development (ambulant sensing, IT services platform, Decision Support, personal context-aware coaching systems), user studies focused on usability, trust, acceptance and user satisfaction, large-scale clinical evaluation studies up to implementation of new services in daily clinical practice, and Social Return on Investment (SROI) analyses. These research and development activities are for a large part focused on health innovations for people with chronic diseases.
Anke Kottink-Hutten werkt sinds 2001 als bewegingswetenschapper bij Roessingh Centrum voor Revalidaite, afdeling Roessingh Research & Development, in Enschede. Ze heeft haar promotieonderzoek afgerond in 2010 aan de Universiteit Twente, waarin ze middels een gerandomiseerde gecontroleerde studie het effect van een implanteerbare twee-kanaals peroneus stimulator heeft onderzocht in vergelijking met de conventionele behandeling bij chronische CVA patiënten met een sleepvoet.
Momenteel is ze als onderzoeker werkzaam binnen verschillende (inter)nationale onderzoeksprojecten welke zich richten op de ontwikkeling en evaluatie van revalidatietechnologie (zoals (soft)robotica, exoskeletten en applied gaming) binnen de (neurologische) revalidatie.