Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Rehabilitation and Assistive Technologies
Date Submitted: Dec 12, 2024
Date Accepted: Jul 15, 2025
How Socially Assistive Robots are Used in Physiotherapy: A Scoping Review
ABSTRACT
Background:
Socially assistive robotics (SARs) are robotic technology platforms equipped with sensing (e.g. through audio or visual) and acting (e.g. speech and movement) capabilities to interact socially with users. SARs are increasingly adopted in physiotherapy to aid patients in their rehabilitation journey by providing feedback, motivation, and encouragement. However, while many studies have explored SAR implementation in physiotherapy, research involving clinical populations remains scarce, and the overall state of SAR deployment is unclear.
Objective:
This scoping review aimed to explore the use of SARs in physiotherapy with clinical populations, how the effectiveness of these interventions has been evaluated, and identify limitations and new areas of application and future work.
Methods:
Following the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses for Scoping Review (the PRISMA-ScR) reporting guideline extension, comprehensive searches based on SARs and physiotherapy were conducted in various databases. Title and abstract screening were performed by one reviewer, with full-text screening conducted by two reviewers. Data extraction, synthesis, and analysis were completed by one reviewer. Data on SAR roles were categorised and synthesised using content analysis. Other descriptive texts were summarised to improve readability.
Results:
Our findings suggest that SARs are commonly utilised in hospital inpatient settings and rehabilitation clinics, primarily for neurological conditions. In these interventions, SARs typically serve roles such as coaching, demonstration, monitoring, and peer support. Their effectiveness is generally evaluated through clinical outcomes, user performance, functional measures, and metrics assessing the robots’ acceptability, usability, and perception.
Conclusions:
This scoping review highlighted SARs’ potential to address challenges faced by human therapists due to the demands of time-extending coaching and monitoring, and the limited availability of therapists. Future research should focus on addressing the limitations identified in this scoping review, including small sample sizes, technical issues in both the robot and intervention design, sufficient involvement of key stakeholders in the design and development of SAR-based interventions, and conducting more clinical trials to investigate SAR intervention effectiveness.
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Copyright
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