sami: (Default)
Sami ([personal profile] sami) wrote in [community profile] accessibility_fail2012-01-02 07:42 am

An odd request, probably...

... but a few days ago, I broke my leg in three places. Unstable ankle fracture means I can't put any weight on it for months; chronic shoulder injury means I can't use crutches, either, so moving around is a struggle and I'm going to be in a wheelchair if I want to leave the house before April.

So what I want to ask is: Does anyone have any warnings or advice on things I might not have thought of about living with a wheelchair? After all the accessibility fails I've read of and seen, I'm a little nervous about what I might run into.
synecdochic: torso of a man wearing jeans, hands bound with belt (Default)

[personal profile] synecdochic 2012-01-02 01:57 am (UTC)(link)
Seconding the gloves! I have several pairs of fingerless weightlifting gloves. I wear 'em out in the palms pretty quickly, but you should be good with just one pair between now and April.

Assuming your shoulder will allow you to push yourself, get a chair that doesn't have pushbar handles on the back. If you do wind up having to have someone push you for a bit, they can grip the side of the frame to push, and not having the handles will reduce the chance that random "helpful" strangers will try to grab your 'chair and move you without warning. (Note, not eliminate the chance. For some reason people like to treat the chair as though it's a piece of unattended luggage. Sigh.)

The more camber (tilt of the wheels) the chair has, the easier it is to corner, the less force it takes to keep the chair in motion, the less strain is on your shoulders while pushing, and the more ergonomic it is to push it. (The downsides are that the chair's footprint will be wider, and the tire treads will wear faster.) You'll probably be renting the chair, not buying, but do ask the rental place if you can try a chair with at least 4 degrees of camber (preferably 8) if they have them.

For people who don't need the armrests to push against for transfers or to lift the body out of the chair to reduce pressure on the spine occasionally, I would strongly, strongly recommend getting a 'chair without armrests. Armrests force you to hold your arms in a very, very unnatural position if you're pushing yourself, and they add weight to the whole 'chair.

No matter what, never count on being able to pee in any given public restroom. If they're one of the extremely rare public handicapped-accessible restrooms that does have enough space for a wheelchair user to do a lateral transfer instead of a head-on transfer, they're that much more likely to be the kind that has the baby changing station in the wheelchair-accessible stall, and it's always my luck to hit the restroom when the changing table is in use. A lot. For a long time.

Practice cornering, tight turns, and back-and-fill maneuvers at home ahead of time. A lot.

Nobody will ever notice you in the wheelchair in a crowd. If you're going out somewhere outside after dark, I recommend twining those glow-necklaces through the spokes of the wheels and around the frame of the chair as much as possible: the human brain will notice "something is glowing and moving" a lot easier than "something at my waist height is moving" and will be more inclined to stop and/or give you room.

Likewise, people in crowds think absolutely nothing about walking in front of you and stopping dead. Any time you work up a good bit of momentum, be ready to clamp your hands down on the wheels to stop as quickly as you can or turn the chair away at any moment. (While I'm generally willing to run into them to teach them a lesson, it can be painful to you.) This is another place the gloves can come in handy: while most chairs have wheel-rims that can be used to push, it's often more effective to just grab the wheel itself. (And even the wheel rims can cause friction burns.)

There is no good way to go downhill without speeding up like whoa. (Holding the wheels or wheelrims to slow yourself can work, but you need to have the gloves on to avoid friction burns.) Shouting "wheeeeee!" as you go is totally optional, but can make you feel a lot better.
synecdochic: torso of a man wearing jeans, hands bound with belt (Default)

[personal profile] synecdochic 2012-01-02 02:01 pm (UTC)(link)
Good luck. :)
ethereon: Leafeon looks pleased (leafeon :))

[personal profile] ethereon 2012-01-04 07:42 am (UTC)(link)
When I worked in a retail warehouse people would stop in front of my moving trolleys. Those things weighed twice what I do, at least. It's like they never learned about momentum in high school, and I have to try really hard not to hit them because I was at work. It sucked. :( If they'll stop right in front of those, I feel like they'll stop right in front of anything (possibly short of actual road vehicles, but I wouldn't count on that either honestly).

Other than that anecdotal weigh-in, I only use a cane at the moment so I can't be of much help on details really. You do get very varying reactions, from the incredibly patronising (which it sounds like your housemates will have well in hand, which is good because I expect they'd be worse in a wheelchair - I've seen people who seem to assume that if you're in a wheelchair you're incapable of making your own decisions, which is just bizarre) to the utterly clueless but generally well-meaning to the really, really helpful. I'm not sure how you'll be getting about since you didn't mention, but I've found bus drivers to be actually uniformly very helpful to me and when people with wheelchairs come onto buses they seem to be the same for them. Store staff are much more of a mixed bag. I think that's because bus drivers have a lot more experience with physically disabled people since a lot of us use public transport. I also find that people in casual hang-out environments tend not to think much about leaving things on the ground, but it sounds like that won't come up very much either.