SummaryBackgroundPeople with disabilities in the developing world do not have equal and adequate access to education, employment, or medical care. Their physical or mental condition, compounded by a lack of financial and technological resources, imposes a burden on both the family and the State. A wheelchair is a form of assistive technology which eases that burden for many. This study examines the impact of a simple, donated chair on the health, quality of life, and function of a subject population.Material/MethodsSurveys were administered to 519 disabled recipients of a semi-rigid depot style wheelchair in 3 different countries at the time they received their chair and again after 12 months of use. Surveys evaluated physical and emotional health, functional independence, and lifestyle.ResultsOn initial reports, 46.6% of subjects said they never left home, 52.3% were hospitalized one or more days/month, 70.3% reported daily pain, and 48.7% reported a negative mood state. Following 12 months of using the wheelchair, both the reported overall health rating and mood state increased by 20%; pain was significantly diminished. Although some areas in the ICF function measure improved more than others, the overall reported level of independence rose by 11%.ConclusionsA representative sample of the disabled in 3 countries of the world is socially isolated, in poor health, and with limited function. Receipt of a simple, depot style wheelchair significantly improved their quality of life, health indicators, and the ICF function measure following 12 months of use.
Twenty-one young male subjects exercised on a cycle ergometer for 60 min at 60% of VO2max. Blood samples collected every 30 min throughout exercise and continuing to 120 min recovery served for the immunological tests. Exercise induced biphasic changes in the various leucocyte subsets. There was a granulocytosis, lymphocytosis and monocytosis during exercise, and a further granulocytosis and a slight monocytosis, but a lymphocytopenia during recovery. All lymphocyte subsets (CD3+, CD19+, CD4+, CD8+, and CD16+ cells) increased in number during exercise, were decreased 30 min after exercise, and had not returned to baseline levels by 120 min of recovery. The apparent lymphocyte responsiveness to the mitogens phytohaemagglutinin (PHA) and pokeweed mitogen (PWM) declined significantly during exercise, returning to normal by 120 min of recovery. The natural killer (NK) activity rose markedly during exercise, but decreased to almost half the pre-exercise level at 30 and 60 min of recovery, returning to baseline levels after 120 min of recovery. Functional capability correlated well with the percentage of each major responder subset in the assay, suggesting that the in vitro lymphocyte PHA- and PWM-responsiveness and the NK activity did not change significantly on a per cell basis. The analysis of lymphocyte marker antigen density revealed that the CD3+, CD4+, CD8+ and CD19+ lymphocytes mobilized into the circulation during exercise did not express the respective CD3, CD4, CD8 and CD19 molecules as strongly as did the subsets circulating at rest, whereas the expression of the CD16 antigen on CD16+ lymphocytes remained unchanged.
Immune responses have been examined in 11 children aged 10.3 ± 0.6 years before and after 12 weeks of aerobic training. Initial resting data showed high total lymphocyte, CD3+ and CD8+ counts, a low CD4+/CD8+ ratio and a low CD25+ count relative to young adults. Acute exercise (30 min at ventilatory threshold) initially increased CD4+, CD8+, and CD56+ counts, and decreased CD4+/CD8+ ratio, but CD56+ count did not decrease during recovery. After training, relative aerobic power remained unchanged at 50 ±3 ml · kg−1 · min−1. However, resting leukocyte, CD3’ and CD25’ counts were decreased, and acute exercise induced smaller changes in leukocyte and subset counts. We conclude that immune responses to exercise are generally similar in children and young adults.
BackgroundLack of access to mobility for people with disabilities, particularly in less- resourced settings, continues to be widespread. Despite challenges to wheelchair delivery, the benefits to health, employment, social integration and life satisfaction are apparent.ObjectivesPrevious studies have explored the impact of receiving a wheelchair on the lives of the users through cross-sectional or short-term longitudinal analysis. The current study was undertaken to evaluate whether previously reported changes were sustained after 30 months of use, and whether results varied between two differing models of a wheelchair.MethodOne hundred and ninety-one subjects from Peru, Uganda and Vietnam received one of two models of wheelchair provided by the Free Wheelchair Mission. Using interviews to record survey results, data were collected at the time the wheelchair was received and following 12 and 30 months of use. Variables of overall health, employment, income and travel were explored through non-parametric analysis.ResultsThere was a significant improvement in overall health and distance travelled after 12 months, but these changes were no longer significant by 30 months (Friedman test for overall change, p = 0.000). Employment status showed a small but significant increase at 12 and 30 months (Cochran’s Q, p = 0.000). Reported income increased slowly, becoming significantly different at 30 months (Friedman test, p = 0.033). There was no association between the model of wheelchair received and the incidence of pressure ulcers, pain or maintenance required. There was higher satisfaction with the GEN_2 wheelchair at 12 months (p = 0.004), but this difference was not apparent by 30 months. Overall wheelchair satisfaction and maintenance levels were favourable.ConclusionWhile overall health status, and distance travelled into the community fluctuated over time, receipt of one of two models of a wheelchair in less-resourced settings of the world appears to have a positive sustained impact on employment and income. Further investigations should be carried out to confirm these results and explore the factors responsible for fluctuating variables. This study affirms the importance of long-term follow-up of outcomes associated with wheelchair distribution in less-resourced environments.
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