(updated March 2006) |
Mobility Assistance This topic requires a book of its own. ‘Lucky’ sufferers will in due course get back on their feet and be able to pick up where they left off. For the others help will be needed getting around. Perhaps just sticks, or a wheel chair, or a motorised chair, or adapted car, or an adapted mini van which can take the patient still in the wheel chair. Everyone needs their own solution and that will develop over time. If there is a message, it is to try to stop using that new aid you have just acquired as soon as you can. We will all end up at different places along the route to mobility. If you have got to the stage of using a zimmer frame or rollator, give yourself a week with it and then see if you can’t manage a couple of steps without it. The first attempt is the hardest. Wheelchairs The NHS wheel chair is fairly basic. If you are going to buy your own, fold down handles are a bonus and removable wheels may be necessary. One choice will be whether to have smooth tyres or treaded ones. Wheel chairs are very much easier to manoeuvre indoors with smooth tyres and they will cause less damage to the carpets. On the down side you will get very little grip on a wet surface outside. If access to your house is via a wooden ramp, you may not be able to get up the ramp on a rainy day! It is easier with treaded tyres but the treads can bring a lot of mess into the house. Cars & Vans When it comes to obtaining a car, do try to get to the Mobility Roadshow which takes place every June. If you are going to buy an adapted car, get there early and, as soon as you arrive, book a test drive in all the models you might consider buying. In the driving seat, there are numerous adaptations; repositioned pedals, hand controls, seat adjustments, steering wheel balls, … They all need to be experimented with. Power steering really does make life very much easier. An automatic is essential if you need hand controls. If you are having hand controls, the indicator switch on the hand control is worth having. Hand control selection needs some care. Most models consist of the two rods, attached to the pedals at the floor and, at the upper end, anchored by a metal bar to the steering column. However some makes are anchored at the top end with a cloth strap around the column which is fixed by Velcro. This type can become stuck inside the steering wheel and could cause a nasty accident — not recommended! The Mobility Roadshow is really worth going to. You may want to look round one day, go away and think through everything overnight, and come back for a second round the next day. This will be worthwhile if you need a more comprehensive conversion to enable you to stay in your wheel chair inside the vehicle. A new ruling (June 2001) means that, where a vehicle is “permanently and substantially adapted” for disabled use by a full-time wheel chair user, then VAT does not have to be paid. More information can be found on the HM Customs and Excise web site at www.hmce.gov.uk (select forms & publications/VAT Information Sheet 7/01) or by phoning 0845 0109 000. The Motability Scheme
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