Saturday, May 22, 2021

FIX THE ENVIRONMENT, NOT THE PERSON

 MY ENDURING SKEPTICISM WITH STAIR-CLIMBING WHEELCHAIRS

 


People without disabilities always seem to being (foolishly, arrogantly) staking their claim as those that know what best for people with disabilities.

I am able-bodied, but a third of a century of being married to (and warmly serving as the caregiver to) a spouse who uses a wheelchair for mobility, has informed my opinions.

While I wouldn't stop research into super-human, super-costly mobility devices, I loathe the idea of "fixing" people with disabilities.

My wife is a Person with a Disability (PWD).

She is not broken.

Rivers bend, trees twist -- they are not considered disabled, they are considered beautiful.

Diversity is seen throughout nature.

It makes life interesting, rich and worth living.

PWDs are a significant portion of the population and buildings, parks, transit, streets, sidewalks, crosswalks, mobility devices and civic space should be designed to accommodate them.

About those I-Bots, exoskeletons and super wheelchairs sold as solutions to barriers for PWDs

I knew a wealthy person with a stair climbing wheelchair.

It cost him a fortune.

It performed about 8 hours per day.

That meant he had to have a backup standard power wheelchair and could never rely on the stair-climbing super chair to meet his daily work and living needs.

The stair-climbing gyroscope of a wheelchair not only cost more than 95% of the population could afford, but it also was subject to very expensive repair and maintenance.

Something that works 1/3 of the day and is out of price reach of nearly all -- IS NOT A SOLUTION.



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