May 2

There are many companies across the UK and Ireland that specialise in providing mobility equipment. Nevertheless, before investing in essential and expensive disability aids, there are certain considerations that must be made.

First of all, it is important to understand exactly what sort of mobility aids would be best for you. Secondly, you need to choose companies that will be able to offer the most support and advice throughout the purchase process.

Two of the most common requirements are wheelchairs and rollators, and careful research should be carried out in order to be aware of the right brands for your mobility needs. DoAbility UK provides an extensive range of mobility equipment that is tailor made to help you. They supply products from leading manufacturers, including Swereco, Volaris, DoBuggy, Easy, Culinare, Excel, and Able2.

By choosing a reputable mobility equipment supplier who does stock these leading brands, you will be far more likely to come home with mobility aids that have lasting value. They will be able to guide you through your purchase from start to finish, making sure that you can test a variety of walking aids.

The implications of having specialist guidance when buying mobility aids are enormous. Not only will it be extremely helpful in boosting your confidence around your new equipment, it will also ensure that you know exactly how to use it, keeping you safe throughout operation.

If you choose to buy your mobility equipment at DoAbility UK, you will be able to make a quality investment that will last for years to come.

Mar 29

We all used support when we were toddlers to walk around. Ironically, when we grow old, we are bound to use another form of support to aid us in walking. A rollator is a device used by people who have problems walking around, or for those with certain challenges and disabilities.

Apart from power wheelchairs, rollators are increasingly popular in the market. All across the globe, one would notice that the rollators and their accessories are constantly being improved to cater to the growing needs of its users.

Rollators are available almost anywhere you go. Those who have mobility problems and disabilities with walking now have more options and wider ranges to choose from. One of the best brands is the Volaris Rollator, which is available at DoAbility UK.

Some people with walking disorders opt for rollators, while some go for the power wheelchairs. Most rollator users are those without serious walking disabilities. Of course, if you are unable to use your legs completely, then a wheelchair is what best suits you.

You can look online for the best deals and bargains on rollators and wheelchairs. You would find discounts along with tips on how to best use your rollator. With such devices coming out in the market, the power to walk despite of your limited mobility is now within a foot reach.

If you are looking for rollators and want to know more about them, visit us at DoAbility UK today.

Feb 13

A disability charitable organisation stated how the brand new Routemaster bus is totally inaccessible with regard to users of huge electric wheelchairs. The bus has been built in Northern Ireland, along with full scale mock-ups, which are currently being examined. However, pressure group Transport for All, which was able to check out the bus, desires more room for wheelchairs.

Transport for London stated that the new bus had a lot more than the actual lawfully needed room with regard to wheelchairs. Nevertheless, wheelchair user Yousef Bey-Zekkoub, who is associated with Transport for All, asserted that when he visited the new bus, he had been totally disappointed. According to him, the wheelchair room is actually small compared to the bus he frequently rides in. It is completely inaccessible for electric wheelchairs. He further stated that one lady, who had been looking to get on the bus in a recent testing session could not get on board whatsoever.

With the 2012 Paralympic games coming, TfL has got the chance to show to the world how much accessible this bus is. Buses ought to be accessible for everyone, and not only for the able-bodied.

Mike Weston, TfL’s operations director for London buses, said that because the mock-up had been delivered this past year, they have been holding sessions with user groups who have been trying out the bus. Based on all of the information given by these users, he explained that they have made a few modifications to the wheelchair bay. He says that a number of rails, as well as seats have been relocated, however, he was adamant that they might not really get rid of some of the seats completely because seniors require lots of seating on the lower level.

The first five buses are due to ply the streets of London first quarter of 2012.

Dec 20

Wheelchairs are used by people for whom walking is difficult or impossible due to an illness, injury, or disability. The earliest record of the wheelchair in England dates from the 1670s.

Here are some famous people who use and used wheelchairs:

STEPHEN HAWKING

Stephen Hawking
Stephen Hawking

He is a well-known example of a person with Motor Neuron Disease (MND), and has lived for more than 40 years with it. The internationally renowned physicist/mathematician has defied time and doctors’ diagnosis that he would not live 2-years beyond his 21st birthday after he was diagnosed with Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS), also referred to as Lou Gehrig’s Disease. The symptoms are very similar to those of Cerebral Palsy. He cannot walk and talk, and has difficulty in holding up his head, swallowing, and breathing. He has been using a special computer that displays the text he types and speaks what he types with an electronic voice.

Hawking knew what he wanted to do by the time he was eight. He did not want to study medicine, a career his parents hoped he would follow. Instead, he decided to be a scientist and chose physics. He was interested in studying the universe. He attended Oxford University in England, as an undergraduate student. He received his Ph.D. in 1966 from Cambridge University. By the time he was 35 years old, he was Cambridge’s first Gravitational Physics professor and received the Lucasian Professor of Mathematics Award. He has also published a book called A Brief History of Time: From the Big Bang to Black Holes. The book tries to explain many of his physical and mathematical ideas and calculations without using math. The book became a best seller and was made into a movie.

FRANKLIN DELANO ROOSEVELT

Franklin Delano Roosevelt
Franklin Delano Roosevelt

He was the 32nd President of the United States. Elected to four terms in office, he served from 1933 to 1945, and is the only U.S. president to have served more than two terms of office. In August 1921, while his family were vacationing at Campobello Island, New Brunswick, he contracted a near fatal case of polio, which resulted in his total and permanent paralysis from the waist down. He refused to accept that he was permanently paralyzed. He tried a wide range of therapies, including hydrotherapy. Fitting his hips and legs with iron braces, he laboriously taught himself to walk a short distance by swiveling his torso while supporting himself with a cane. In private, he used a wheelchair, but he was careful never to be seen in it in public. In 2003, a peer-reviewed study found that it was more likely that his paralytic illness was actually Guillain-Barré Syndrome, not Poliomyelitis.

Pres. Roosevelt established a foundation at Warm Springs, Georgia to help other people who had polio, and he directed the March of Dimes Program that eventually funded an effective vaccine.

THEODORE DEREESE PENDERGRASS, SR.

Theodore DeReese Pendergrass, Sr.
Theodore DeReese Pendergrass, Sr.

His career began when he was a drummer for The Cadillacs, which soon merged with Harold Melvin and the Blue Notes. He was invited by Melvin to become the lead singer after he jumped from the rear of a stage and started singing his heart out. On March 18, 1982, in Philadelphia, he was involved in an automobile accident when the brakes failed on his Rolls Royce and he hit a tree, leaving him paralyzed from the waist down with a spinal cord injury. After completing six months in rehabilitation, he returned to the studio to record the album Love Language, featuring the 1984 ballad “Hold Me”, a duet with a then-unknown Whitney Houston.

CHRISTOPHER REEVE

Christopher Reeve
Christopher Reeve

He was an American actor, director, producer, and writer. He portrayed Superman/Kal-El/Clark Kent in four films, from 1978 to 1987. In the 1980s, he also starred in several films, including Somewhere in Time (1980), Deathtrap (1982), The Bostonians (1984), and Street Smart (1987). In May 1995, he was paralyzed in an accident during an equestrian competition. His horse balked at a rail jump, pitching him forward where he landed head first. His injuries left the actor paralyzed, unable to use any of his limbs or even to breathe without the help of a respirator. He was confined to a wheelchair for the rest of his life. He lobbied on behalf of people with spinal cord injuries, and for human embryonic stem cell research after his accident. He founded the Christopher Reeve Foundation and co-founded the Reeve-Irvine Research Center. He was dedicated to increasing public awareness about spinal cord injury and to raising money for research for a cure. He was also the Chairman of the American Paralysis Association and Vice Chairman of the National Organization on Disability. He died at age 52 on October 10, 2004 from cardiac arrest caused by a systemic infection. Never has a person with a disability commanded so much media attention in recent history.

ITZHAK PERLMAN

Itzhak Perlman
Itzhak Perlman

He is an Israeli-American violinist, conductor, and pedagogue. He is one of the most distinguished violinists of the late 20th century. He contracted polio at the age of four. He made a good recovery, learning to walk with the use of crutches. Today he uses a wheelchair or walks with the aid of crutches on his arms and plays the violin while seated. Critics say it is not the music alone that makes his playing so special. They say he is able to communicate the joy he feels in playing, and the emotions that great music can deliver.

Perlman began his music career at the Academy of Music in Tel-Aviv, Israel. In 1958, at the age of 13, he won in an Israeli talent competition. This made it possible for him to travel to the United States to tour and appear on television. He then stayed in the U.S. and continued his musical training at the Juilliard School in New York City. In 1964, he won a contest among young musicians known as the Leventritt Competition. Winning opened doors for him to perform his violin music all over the world. In 1986, he received the nation’s Medal of Liberty from U.S. President Ronald Reagan. His joy of making music has captivated audiences and has achieved him a level of respect and admiration among people of many nations. Great violin concertos make up the core of his recorded music, ranging from the baroque to the contemporary. He is also featured in the hit movie Music of the Heart.

Itzhak is also a well known advocate for people with disabilities, actively promoting laws to ease access to buildings and transportation.

TANNI GREY THOMPSON

Tanni Grey Thompson
Tanni Grey Thompson

She is the disabled athlete that most people instantly recognize. She has competed in Paralympic Games since 1988, representing Britain at distances ranging from 100m to 800m. She has won fourteen paralympic medals including nine golds, and has broken over twenty world records. As a wheelchair athlete, she was also the winner of London marathons in 1992, 1994, 1996, 1998 and 2001. In recent years, she has established herself as a TV presenter, including BBC TWO’s From the Edge disability magazine programme.

PAT STACK

Pat Stack
Pat Stack

He was a left-wing revolutionary, and was part of the Socialist Workers Party’s organizing committee. He uses a wheelchair, resulting from a Thalidomide pregnancy. Unlike Roosevelt, he does not keep his disability hidden. As well as having a brilliant political understanding, he is a great speaker and does several meetings every year at Marxism in London. He wrote the “Stack On The Back” article in Socialist Review, the SWP’s monthly magazine, from the 1980s until late 2004.

Oct 15

The modern marketplace has a lot of different sorts of mobility equipment available to help the disabled and elderly. Time and thought should be invested before you purchase any type of mobility equipment. Some of the factors to consider are flexibility, comfort level, and cost.

Wheelchairs provide excellent mobility both indoors and outside. You can purchase a wheelchair that is either manually operated or motorized. Manual wheelchairs are relatively inexpensive, though they are best used by those who can propel their own wheelchairs. The greatest advantage of motorized wheelchairs is that they do not require human effort, since they use a built-in motor and run on a power supply or a battery. Portable ramps made of steel or aluminium can also be purchased to help navigate steps.

Check the wheelchairs for comfort because misaligned seat or the seating position can bring inconvenience and amplify your pain. Today’s wheelchairs can be customized to meet the needs of a wide variety of physical disabilities.

Disabled people can ascend and descend a staircase using a stair lift. They attach a rail to the stairs, and on the rail is a chair the rider can sit on. This costs less than an in home elevator or a platform lift. Some factors you want to look at in your search for a chair lift are the height and width, and whether they’d fit the person who’s going to use it. Additionally, it will need to be sturdy enough to support the weight of the person who will be using it. It is also wise to check how much power it uses, how flexibly and smoothly it operates, safety tips, and warranties.

Motorized scooters can be customized to meet the individual needs of people with disabilities. The rider will be kept safe with enhanced safety features. People with disabilities can now move around their environment more freely with help from a variety of mobility equipment.