An Investigation into the Accuracy of LiDAR Technology for In-Home Rehabilitation Planning: A Proof-of-Concept Study

Read the full article See related articles

Discuss this preprint

Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Background : Accurate home assessment is essential for safe hospital discharge and aging-in-place, yet staff shortages create significant delays. The integration of technology into discharge pathways could augment occupational therapy services and optimize health system resources. Methods : This proof-of-concept study had three aims: (1) identify priority occupational therapy home assessment components through expert survey (n=30 occupational therapists); (2) evaluate consumer LiDAR device accuracy (iPhone 13 Pro Max, iPad Pro 11-inch, Leica BLK360 G1) against tape measurement (±0.1 cm) across varying light conditions (54-1051 LUX); and (3) determine which assessment components can be objectively measured by LiDAR versus requiring clinical evaluation. Results : Survey respondents identified 59 priority assessment items across six domains. LiDAR devices demonstrated high measurement reliability: iPad Pro (ICC=0.989-1.000), iPhone (ICC=0.967-0.999), and Leica (ICC=0.998-1.000). Analysis of measurability revealed that 50.8% of assessment items (n=30) can be measured by LiDAR technology, while 49.2% (n=29) require clinical assessment through questionnaires or in-person evaluation. Notably, lower-priority items demonstrated higher measurability (61.1%) compared to highest-priority items (50.0%), indicating that critical assessment domains involve complex person-environment interactions beyond spatial measurement capabilities. Conclusions : Consumer LiDAR technology offers accurate measurement of home dimensions for rehabilitation planning. A hybrid assessment model combining automated LiDAR measurement with clinical expertise is recommended, potentially reducing assessment time while maintaining quality and targeting in-person visits to items requiring professional judgment.

Article activity feed