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The SoloRider "Thanks for giving me my life back"
www.HomeCEUConnection.com
Newsletter by Brandon and Anne March 2008
Hello
fellow clinicians! We took a few months off from the newsletter
so we could better serve our customers during the busy season, but
we are back! I hope everyone had a wonderful holiday season.
Our
feature article this month is about the SoloRider. We met the company
president this fall at Rehab Summit in Vegas. I instantly thought
of several patients that would truly benefit-not just physically,
but also mentally-from this vehicle. As clinicians, we are constantly
looking for new ideas, treatments or devices to help our patients
function better in their environment. I think you will find the
information valuable for yourself and patients, but you can also
pass it on to friends and family that may benefit as well.
The
SoloRider - "Thanks for giving me my life back," exalted a California
woman living with MS who thought she'd never play golf again. From
a golfer in Ohio, "...thank you for helping get me off the couch
and onto the course." A golfer in Dallas who hadn't played for nearly
seven years because of the inability to walk: "After going out on
the golf course yesterday, I slept all night last night for the
first time in years."
With
the assistance of the SoloRider single rider golf car, these avid
golfers are linked with their love of golf once again.
The
SoloRider is an innovative vehicle adapted to accommodate those
among us with mobility challenges. Equipped with hand controls and
a swivel seat for easy entry and exit, golfers can hit a golf ball
from an upright position if they so choose. The seat can also position
them in standing position.
The
benefits of this golf car have taken it off the course as well.
Paraglegics and amputees are using it for hiking, bird watching,
and everyday errands.
Rehabilitation
hospitals across the nation are using golf as therapy to encourage
static and dynamic balance as well as active lifestyles, and as
a means of instilling confidence, quality of life and improve health.
What's better than fresh air and sunshine... and some golf at the
same time!
According
to the last U.S. census, nearly 21% of Americans 16 and older are
defined as living with a disability under the ADA. About 12 million
use a wheelchair, scooter, cane, crutch or walker to get around.
Nearly 12% of Americans play golf according to the National Golf
Foundation, and if we apply that percentage to America's mobility
impaired, that's a whole lot of potential golfers at the nation's
16,000 golf courses.
The
golf industry states that a lack of "demand" is the reason that
single rider adapted golf care are not available at each course,
even though the Department of Justice has ruled in settlement agreements
that public access golf courses must provide these golf cars.
It's
up to golfers with disabilities to change the lay of the links.
The technology is available to enable them to play. Call your local
golf course and let them know they need an adaptive single rider
golf car. Create the demand!
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