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Drive Medical

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Drive Medical Blue Streak Wheelchair with Flip Back Detachable Desk Arms and Swing-away Foot Rest, Blue, 18"
(Health and Beauty) Drive Medical
Release date: 2009-11-06

Comes with a calf strap
Nylon upholstery
Flip-back, padded desk length arm


Price: $286.00 $106.50

Answers

what is the average cost of a simple travel wheelchair in India ? Any dealers in Hyderabad?
Cherry Blossom I Love DC Shirt Vendor Independence Avenue in SW Washington D.C.

Looking for a simple travel wheelchair for the maid's disabled son. The wheelchair is needed for just travel from one place to another.


No idea dear friend. anyway I'm very near to India and really interested to travel in this way. so it will be helpful to me also to have the answer here.

Wheelchair Travel Tips -Boarding a Plane & Renting a Car


Great travel tips from Mark, a paraplegic and experienced wheelchair user, on everything from checking your wheelchair, getting an aisle chair, to ...

I need information on wheelchair travel to Poland including to Auschwitz?
Vintage Wheelchair

A college student who uses a wheelchair wants to go with an educational group on a trip to Poland including to Auschwitz. He will need accessible transportation, hotels and access to sites. All I have been able to find is an accessible hotel in Warsaw. I have accessed many sites on travel for persons with disabilities.


http://www.poland-tourism.pl/note.asp?ld =EN&tf=PL&tp=&gc=PL&wd=& amp;oi=desc/PL00000000000620

They should be able to help you. However, don't count for much - Poland isn't a wheelchair-friendly enviroment, and althouh people are likely to go to great lenghts to help a disabled person (povided you ask them to), there are still a lot of architectonical barriers.

The Oswiecim (where Auschwitz Museum is located) is accessible either by train, or by bus. Long-range buses in Poland are definitely not wheelchair-friendly, neither your typical cruise buses are. Trains - the short-range suburban trains have wide access doors, the regular carriages have more conventional, narrow doors. However, if the station's platform is a low one (a common sight outside of main cities), it's completely impossible for a person on wheelchair to get out of a train on his/her own. Even with a high platform, I don't think it would be easy, if possible at all. Still, you're going as a group, so I suppose there would be possible to get other group members to help the person on the wheelchair. Also, as for the train, you can ask for train personnel's help.
When I was wisiting Oswiecim by train, the station had a low platform. However, this was over 10 years ago.

As for the Museum at Auschwitz, most places will be not accessible for a wheelchair. The original barracks of the concentation camp had no wheelchair ramps when I was there 4 years ago, and i doubt whether it would change. After all, the Museum is going to great lenghts to keep everything as close to the original impression as they can, and originally there were no ramps.

Medline Transport Wheelchair with Brakes, Blue
Medline

Price: $209.99 $134.50

Back composite wheels require virtually no maintenance and incorporate dual-seal precision bearings
The powder coated aluminum frame is lightweight, durable and is available in red and blue
Loop brakes are included for assistance stopping the chair

Can someone in an electric Wheelchair travel on an airplane?
Korean Memorial



An electric wheelchair cannot be brought on board an airplane and secured.

There is more information at the website I've listed. I hope this helps.

Light 14.8 lbs Medline Freedom Transport Wheelchair 300 lb Cap Chair, BLUE
MedLine

300 lbs weight capacity
Available in a burgundy or blue frame
19 inch seat width

i am disabled, what will it happen if when i travel to usa i bring back a wheelchair?
Korean Memorial

I am disabled and here in UK all the wheelchairs look geriatric, and the ones that they dont, are far out of my budget.I have seen the one i like in U.S.A and i am thinking of bringing it back when i travel, but also i have no idea if there will be any inconvinience when I check it in with my luggage.


The worst thing that can happen is that you will have to pay tax on it when you come back to the UK. As for bringing it on the plane, just make sure the airline knows in advance and it will go in the hold with no problems. When you check in for your flight home be sure to use the wheelchair, the ground staff with then wheel you to the plane and make sure your chair goes in the hold. When you arrive in the UK wait for your chair and let them wheel you to customs and immigration. It's less likely they will even think of you having to pay tax for the chair if you are actually using it.

How can a wheelchair-bound college student travel Asia with her American friend? Ideas?
Paralympics 2008: wheelchair basketball

Hi! I am a 20-year-old from Asia who has not known the limitlessness of life until I met Tif, an outdoor American girl who brought me on bike rides and donkey rides. I have never travelled without my parents but would like to do so within the next year. Any suggestions?

Several issues include: wheelchair accessibility, accessible bathroom, backpacking tools, light-weight mobility equipments, options for transportation, cost? We have considered Japan, Thailand, Vietnam, China, and the Philippines... but we don't know if it is too difficult for us.

Also, what can we do to get sponsors and people to help? We're thinking of putting together an inspirational program and both of us can speak to inspire the local people. Please suggest!!!


I am an American male in good health and I find getting around in most Asian cities a real challenge, Not only do they not have handicapped accessible public bath rooms. they do not even have bath rooms.
There are very few places that you will find a sidewalk in the sense that we think of a sidewalk. If it is a sidewalk, there are vendors set up on it and people driving trucks on it.
The major cities of China do not fit this pattern. You can get around Beijing, Shenyang, Shenzhen very well. But public transport is not accessible. Forget about trying Bangkok or Manila.
But if you have enough grit , you can do anything. It really depends on your mind set.
Try it and love the adventure !


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  • Metropolis POV » Accessibility Watch

    Following my recent post on the clash between historic preservation and universal design , we’ve decided to undertake a regular blog column on accessibility in buildings and cities. We hope to discuss examples from all over the world, but at first our focus will be where we are, New York City. I walk with a cane or, recently, with forearm crutches, and I find it difficult to go up or down steps or stairs. I often wonder what folks in wheelchairs do. Those of us with mobility impairments cannot easily use the subway system because there are so few elevators, and those that exist seldom are working. The bus systems are not much better, and only 239 of the city’s taxis have the necessary wheelchair lifts and ramps. (Admittedly, New York still has the largest fleet of fully-accessible taxis of any city in the nation.)

    ...

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