One of those wonderous and quirky things of life.
If you are running QuickTime, go to this movie.
If you are stuck on Windows, the best one is this movie.
And know that he was not trained to do this, he picked it up on his own!
One of those wonderous and quirky things of life.
If you are running QuickTime, go to this movie.
If you are stuck on Windows, the best one is this movie.
And know that he was not trained to do this, he picked it up on his own!

We were feeling a bit snowbound just after Christmas. Not everybody shovels their sidewalk and the snow doesn’t have to get too deep to be too much for a standard wheelchair (even a new purple one). So we brought out the Winter Wheelchair (AKA a Baby Jogger Special Needs Junior Outdoor Mobility Device. I’m not kidding.) This thing can plow through pretty much anything. Last year I even took it up Riverdale hill a dozen times while tobogganing with Jon (if I do it this year, it’ll probably be the last–he’s heavy and it’s steep!)
It’s not a perfect solution…Jon’s posture isn’t too great just sitting in the hammock (and it does affect him afterwards). But he loves the outdoors and we were all getting a little grumpy, and the crankiness literally diappears when we get out to the front step. It is a big emotional deal. So it’s all a balance.
Uh-oh. In the course of linking this post I notice that the Baby Jogger company has relegated the Special Needs series to their Non-Current Model section. Implying that it might be discontinued. This is a concern because within a couple of years, our guy is going to need a bigger Winter Wheelchair (ie a Baby Jogger Special Needs Outdoor Mobility Device). I hope they aren’t doing anything drastic.
The first person to survive rabies without receiving a vaccination after infection has just left hospital. The 15-year-old girl, who was bitten by a rabid bat in September, still has much speech, physical and occupational therapy to undergo in the coming months, but will probably be able to resume her schooling soon.
The treatment protocol has yet to be published, but because the medications used are commonly available, the doctors at the Medical College of Wisconsin are hoping that this treatment could be useful for developing nations, where rabies is much more common (and treatment may not be as prompt).
Even though rabies is easily treatable with the vaccine, it’s nice to know that, untreated it may not be the automatic death sentence it always has been.

After about a year and a half of wrangling with the system, Jon has a new wheelchair.
His old wheelchair was never appropriate for his needs, and only really fit him in the last six months, although it was prescribed five years ago, with a rebuild three years ago. Given the cost of the rebuild, it should have just been replaced–in retrospect was a poor decision, but not ours to make. Though we authorized it. Let me elaborate.
To obtain a wheelchair that is funded (in whole or in part) by the public system, you enter a bureaucratic machine that is still a little overly complicated, to put it gently. I think that every individual involved is doing their best within the system, but I have a few bones to pick with the system itself.
To begin, you talk to a physiotherapist, or in our case (this time), the seating clinic of Bloorview MacMillan, the local hospital for disabled kids, who assigns you a PT. The first question our of their mouths is “Who will be the vendor?”, meaning the private company who will supply and service the wheelchair. The PTs are not allowed to recommend a vendor, which is understandable. Problem is, how are the parents supposed to know of a good one? We don’t even know how many suppliers there might be – wheelchair vendors aren’t exactly likely to be in the local mall! The only people who have a sense of the options out there – who work with all of the suppliers on a daily basis and who are most likely to have an idea of an appropriate vendor – are the physiotherapists, and they are not allowed to have an opinion.
Frustrating. At least in our case we have hooked onto some nice folks at HME Mobility , so off we go.
But as of last year Jon hadn’t grown out of his chair. And since we were asking for some government funding for the chair, the physiotherapists were extremely reluctant to authorize a new chair until he grew too big for the old, bad chair. (Without a compelling reason for a new chair there’s a chance that the government wouldn’t authorize the money. Of course, in my view the fact that Jon couldn’t wheel the old chair without slouching over is a damn good reason, but I guess that’s harder to put on a form than “grew too big”.)
Remember, these chairs are what the physiotherapists worry about in terms of
long-term posture–the kids are sitting in them for eight hours at school, and some of them at home as well. They are very touchy about how an incorrectly-prescribed chair could lead to permanent issues down the road.
But from what I see, if the chair is inappropriate but not too small, you are stuck. I’m sure this disconnect comes from the need to balance the expenditure of government cash with the needs of the child, but it does seem like everything is serving the system, and not the people in need.
As well, parents co-sign for the equipment along with the physioterapist who recommends it, but of course, we are going entirely on the recommendations of the PT. So in the long term it’s deemed as the parents’ fault if the equipment is inappropriate. We were led down the garden path by Jon’s first PT and vendor, and now we’re the ones that gets blamed for it by the current PTs. Grrrr.
As we delayed for growth, we dealt with some other bureaucratic issue on another front, so initial funding concerns for us were resolved and the hospital was told of this in late April, so were given an immediate appointment in… mid August.
This was the most productive meeting: We had a room of experts. The vendor, the therapist and the seating technicians, all taking measurements and discussing which bits and pieces will be the most beneficial for the wheelchairee. Sometimes we had a chance to offer an opinion, but more often it was a flurry of jargon. Occasionally we would interrupt to make sure we got a sense of things. Fair enough. HME was to provide the chair, the hospital would provide the seating. It would happen within 2-3 weeks of provincial approval.
Provincial approval took just over a month, and HME worked quickly, but it was early December before we were asked to come for the final touches. And that’s when we found out that though the vendor had supplied the parts correctly, all of the seat parts that the Bloorview Seating Clinic ordered were too small. They tried to brush it off by claiming that Jon had grown several inches since August. But since 1) they got other simple basics of the order wrong (like the type of seat belt latch we had all agreed on) and 2) WE’RE HIS PARENTS AND JUST NOT THAT STUPID (he had grown maybe one inch, if that) we just stared at them. They asked for another week, which turned into three. Just before Christmas, the new seat parts came in and we’re away to the races.
A chair that fits. Easy to push. Better for him to practise wheeling himself.
So onto the next challenge. In his new perfectly-fitting chair, Jon automatically slumps forward. What the ???
Well, we’ll see as the New Year progresses.

Sorry for the quiet second half of December folks, it gets a little busy around here due to a self-created annual blitz. Every year, one of us (Laura this year) does up a New Year’s illustration and the two of us go into overdrive as we produce a New Year’s card, a fully designed Jon-themed calendar and DVD of Jon’s home movies for family, and we create a gifts for Jon’s teachers and Ed. Assistants– all of these based on that visual theme. So although we started into this when paying work had died down earlier this month, Laura and I were beavering away, up well past 2 am Christmas Eve working on the final design touches for the DVD and slipcase.
We go overboard.
So, in short, your card is on the way. And if you are family, you’ve got your calendar already, unless you live in the Yukon, in which case it’s on it’s way. DVD’s will be posted to the upper and lower West Coast in the next day or two.
Hey, maybe by New Year’s we’ll post a gallery of previous cards on Jon’s site. I’ve been meaning to do that… (Great, another deadline!)
This week, two Ohio State University researchers published an enormous study that refutes the commonly-held belief that terminally-ill people can will themselves to live until significant dates (eg birthdays, Christmas, etc) have passed. This is known as the Passover effect (due to one study involving observant Jews over the high religious holidays) and has been noted – anecdotally – for years.
The current study looked at 300,000 terminally ill cancer patients and charted their deaths statistically around their birthdays as well as around Christmas and Thanksgiving (as the two most important U.S. holidays). No significant dip or peak in death rates was found around any of these dates.
The researchers noted that their results fly in the face of anecdotal evidence, but state that there may be much wishful thinking involved in believing that people can live longer through sheer force of will. Some authors of previous studies (such as the Passover study mentioned above) scoff at these new results, but there seems to be a lot of “how dare these grinches publish this right before Christmas”-type criticism flying around.
But whether or not this current study is valid, the lead author, biostatistician Donn Young gives sage advice: ?I think the most important thing for all of us to take away from this is the notion of attending to what is important. In other words, don’t put off what is meaningful in life. Do it now, before it is too late.? Wise words indeed. Happy Holidays!
Grrr. A very odd event, but the second time it has happened: I was deleting a spam comment to this post, and when I rebuilt it had become the message!!
The original message is gone. Not that it was much of a message. The first time it happened we thought it was an accident (hence the title of this post), but now that it’s happened twice, I’ll assume that someone clever with no life has found a little bug that allows this malicious hack. It apparently requires the right conditions–I must have been sloppy in how I went about deleting…very odd.