West Virginia Executive Fall 2018 | Page 72

Josh Hagan of the WVU Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute and Chad Snodgrass of the WVU athletic training staff demonstrate cryogenic therapy, one of the four modalities to augment human performance. Photo by WVU Medicine. “It’s not just about athletes and military. It’s also about switching from reactionary health care systems to a health and wellness perspective.” 70 WEST VIRGINIA EXECUTIVE “We’ve seen a reduction of between 85-100 percent in those conditions,” he says. “It not only saves the Department of De- fense a lot of money in training, but it keeps the pipeline open for those trainees as well.” Benefits in the Medical Field One of the major opportunities at the WVU Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute is the ability to use the knowledge the staff gains from working with military and athletic popula- tions to help the patient population. Over the last year, Galster and his team have been able to identify addiction and chron- ic pain—two of the top priority populations they wanted to work with. With the addiction population, the Comprehen- sive Opioid Addiction Treatment Program, known as COAT, has allowed the team to work with different groups of that population, including people who have been clean and sober for more than 90 days. “When they meet with our therapist every other week, our therapist will say, ‘Hey, how’s it going? How have the last two weeks been?’ Typically, the answer is, ‘Fine’ or some kind of vanilla response,” says Galster. “What we are doing now is providing wearable devices so I can track their heart rate, their activity and their sleep and look at their stress response. I’m able to then ask them about what was going on when this happened.” Galster is also performing cognitive testing with this pop- ulation via cell phones. If a patient doesn’t have a cell phone, he provides them one.