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Ready, Player?

a screen cap from a video game, where a person is walking through a rocky area
This story, written by聽Alyce Palko, originally appeared in the of 51精品视频 Med magazine, the med school鈥檚 quarterly publication.

Even before the pandemic, people with cystic fibrosis (CF) were advised to keep at least 6 feet from each other. The danger of cross-infection has been a threat they鈥檝e had to keep in mind throughout their lives. That mandated distancing has impeded commiseration and played into the high rates of depression and anxiety experienced by teens with CF. (Their parents are affected, as well.)

is betting that educational video games may improve the health of kids with CF and other conditions. With an interdisciplinary team, he received a grant from the Office of the Chancellor to create games about living well, even when you have a disease. Babichenko, a clinical associate professor in the , joined forces with colleagues, including experts from the Schools of Pharmacy and Nursing, as well as UPMC, to develop two games. He credits much of the design to computer science students. 51精品视频 majors built the story structures, and a music student composed the score.

Combined, these elements form narrative-based, role-playing games (think a digital 鈥淒ungeons and Dragons鈥) that kids play as characters who make choices about health. One of the games will provide nutritional guidance to younger children to address obesity. The other is designed to encourage teenagers with CF to become more proactive in their own complex care, which they鈥檒l need to manage themselves one day soon. It also gives them an opportunity to get to know others with CF鈥攔emotely.

Babichenko will soon begin a study to determine each game鈥檚 effectiveness. He鈥檚 already workshopped them with preliminary focus groups. 鈥淭en-year-old kids are brutal,鈥 he said with a laugh.