Kumari Palany & Co

City-based techie develops app for children with disability

Posted on: 12/Sep/2016 4:23:34 PM
Natarajan Raman, a city-based app developer, has designed ‘Easy Communication’, an app which helps children with autism, cerebral palsy, dyslexia and intellectual disability to communicate with parents and caregivers. The app has also been selected as one of the top five ideas to be presented at the Google Developer Summit in Bengaluru.

Natarajan, who also works with students at Vasantham, a special school, said the app was born out of a need to facilitate easy communication.
His mother-in-law runs this special school. It caters to children with intellectual disability and was started in 1989. Totally, there are 145 children, out of which 65 are residential students.

His wife is a speech therapist. They were looking up for some apps to help communicate with the children apart from the traditional means like storyboard or pictures on notebooks. The apps they found were mostly suited to western needs, which are different from the requirements of parents here. The few apps from India were good but too complex and required commercial licence to use. So, they wanted to develop an app for Indian parents and caregivers, which will be easy to use. The result was ‘Easy Communication’ App coming into existence.

Natarajan is set to present this app at the showcase in association with Tata Trust. He explained that the user interface can easily be mastered by the parents or caregivers.

He says, “Once you open the app, there are six photos denoting different actions, indicating hunger, thirst, etc. The parent/ caregiver can take pictures of the child performing this action and upload it. If the child is hungry, it can point to the corresponding picture and communicate the need. We also have an audio recording option, the caretaker or kid can record the action in their own voice and this audio message would be played when kids press the action picture. We have a feature called ‘Alert’, which sends an SMS alert or call to the parent/caregiver in case they are away.”

Natarajan says that the interface can easily be mastered by anyone. More than the children, it is important to teach the caregivers/ parents, who are basically from the middle-class and not too adept at using the smartphone. For this reason, the app was kept simple and found that it could be mastered within an hour. Caregivers liked the app because they can continue training the children even at home. The app is designed to support low-end devices as we do not want affordability to become a hindrance. This is an open source and free app. The app is already available on Google Play and Natarajan is currently working on fine-tuning the performance.