NEWS

June 9, 2011
SAM SCHMIDT PARALYSIS FOUNDATION, FROEDTERT & MEDICAL COLLEGE OF WI AND THE MILWAUKEE 225 ARE "LEADING THE CHARGE TO FIND A CURE FOR PARALYSIS"

Kick off Father's Day weekend and join us for a Family Fun Day and 2.25 mile Walk 'N Wheel to raise money for paralysis research and awareness!
The Sam Schmidt Paralysis Foundation, Froedtert & the Medical College of Wisconsin, and the Milwaukee 225 are “

June 7, 2011
CALLING ALL INDY RACE FANS! Run, Walk 'N Wheelathon in Edmonton

"Lap the Track" Edmonton Run, Walk 'N Wheelathon for Spinal Cord Injury Research
    Calling all Indy race fans!   Here’s your chance-of-a-lifetime to see the Edmonton Indy track from an incredible perspective, while you “

June 3, 2011
START YOUR ENGINES! 3rd Annual Honda Indy Toronto 5K Run, Walk 'N Wheelathon

Your chance to experience the Honda Indy Toronto race course
  Join us at the Official Honda Indy Track (Exhibition Place) for the 3rd Annual Honda Indy Toronto 5K Run, Walk '


NEWS

← Go back

¦ March 26, 2010
MORE PEOPLE LIVE WITH PARALYSIS THAN DOCTORS KNEW
Reprinted from The Jerusalem Post

Surprising new research says nearly 1.3 million Americans are living with a spinal-cord injury, five times more than previous estimates. Overall, 5.5 million people in the US have some degree of paralysis due to a variety of neurologic problems, from multiple sclerosis to strokes, says the report released Tuesday.

The findings will help health authorities finally understand the scope of need in this largely hidden population. "They're not all Christopher Reeves," said study author Anthony Cahill, a disability specialist at the University of New Mexico, referencing the late actor's extensive spinal-cord injury and his highly publicized quest for groundbreaking treatments to overcome it. Not only have less extensive injuries often gone uncounted, but the report suggests that people are living longer with paralysis - and they're now starting to face the added complications of aging on top of a disability.

"There's no road map for somebody like me," said Alan T. Brown of Hollywood, Fla., who broke his neck 21 years ago, just before his 21st birthday. From a youth spent in wheelchair marathons, he's entering middle age suddenly needing more care, like an electric wheelchair instead of a manual. Infections are becoming more common. That's on top of the extra hurdles to arrange routine care, like a colonoscopy.

"Before World War II, you were lucky to live" after a spinal-cord injury, said Joseph Canose of the Christopher & Dana Reeve Foundation, which funded the study. "Now that they're living much longer, many of our supports are wholly inadequate.

"Until now, people with the worst injuries were most likely to be counted, Cahill said, those like Reeve who wind up at specialty treatment centers. Even less firm were estimates of how many people have arms or legs paralyzed or partly paralyzed by some other condition.

So, with advice from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and leading disability specialists, Cahill designed a survey of 33,000 US households to measure how many people are living with some form of paralysis. Beyond the overall toll, the findings paint a sobering picture of the cycle of paralysis and poverty. About a quarter of the paralyzed have an annual household income below $10,000, compared with 7 percent of the US population, the report said.

That doesn't surprise disability experts: Patients often lose their jobs, and caregiving needs can cost a spouse a job, too, ending employer insurance. Treatment, including the physical therapy that can improve independence and sometimes movement, is costly. There are income limits to qualify for Medicaid, and cash-strapped states are limiting coverage.

The Reeve foundation plans to use the findings to push for health policy changes, including ending a federal requirement that disabled workers wait 24 months before getting health care through Medicare. Also on its target list: insurance policies that forbid $400 air cushions for wheelchairs until someone's already suffered a skin ulcer that can require a $75,000 hospital stay.

Florida's Brown knows he's lucky, able to pursue a lucrative public relations career and be a mentor to other spinal-cord patients despite being mostly paralyzed from the chest down. Before his injury, he had a private insurance policy that lasted until recently. Now, he said, "I'm paying out of pocket like you wouldn't believe," and worries about how his wife and two young sons will cope if he worsens enough that he has to quit working. "I thought I was bigger than the chair. I finally realized the chair is bigger than me," Brown said.