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DONATED SEGWAYS MAY HELP DISABLED VETS GET BACK ON
FEET -- Although not approved as a medical
device, disabled
veterans report that the Segways give them
greater mobility.

Segs4Vets web site is here...
http://www.segs4vets.org/
Story here...
http://www.usatoda
y.com/news/nation/2007-12-04-Segway_soldiers_N.htm
Story below:
-------------------------
Donated Segways may help disabled vets get back
on feet
By Oren Dorell, USA TODAY
The last time Erick Castro went to an amusement
park with his wife and 2-year-old son he paid to get them in and left.
Walking around for hours was simply too much for the former Army sergeant
who lost a leg while in Iraq.
But recently, Castro, 27, received a Segway personal transporter and his
life changed. He can get to his classes with more ease at Arizona State
University and do a lot of the little things, like get the mail, that were
once difficult.
Best of all, "now I can stay at the amusement park," he says.
Article continues below:
"ASK
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Castro is among 56 veterans who've received a
Segway from Segs4Vets, a charitable group headed by a disabled
businessman.
The group is in the process of giving away 42 of the stand-up electric
scooters to disabled veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The
last 17 of those will be awarded today at a ceremony in Arlington, Va.
Although not approved as a medical device, disabled veterans report that
the Segways give them greater mobility. Therapists say they could be part
of a future movement for the industry because they force soldiers to stand
longer, which helps them is getting used to their prosthetic limbs.
"We're in the walking business," says Mark Heniser, a physical therapist
at Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio. "We are giving these guys …
knees with microprocessors that cost tens of thousands of dollars. We want
them to use them. This will help them walk more efficiently."
Jumping on bandwagon
Segs4Vets was created by St. Louis businessman Jerry Kerr, who suffered a
spinal cord injury nine years ago. Kerr, a home builder and real estate
developer, shattered a vertebra in his neck in a diving accident at his
lake house in 1998. After years of therapy, Kerr regained the ability to
stand and has some control of his hands, but can hardly walk.
Kerr, 53, was among the first to buy a battery-operated Segway, shortly
after the device was introduced in 2001. He used it around his house for
everyday getting around and for trips, such as when he toured Yosemite
National Park. He liked being able to talk to people eye to eye despite
his injury.
And something else happened.
"The more I used it, the stronger I got," Kerr says. "All those balancing
muscles that disappeared started coming back."
Hearing about soldiers and Marines who lost limbs fighting in Iraq and
Afghanistan got Kerr thinking about how he could help. He wanted to honor
their sacrifice and see if they also could benefit from Segways.
"When you see guys use it (for the first time), you see light bulbs go on,
you see joy on their faces," Kerr says. "You take a guy with his legs
chopped off, and joy is a scarce commodity."
Segs4Vets also has donated seven machines to military medical centers so
physical therapists can evaluate and train injured veterans for the
program.
Recipients are chosen by a committee that includes a retired Air Force
general. The committee considers in part how much a Segway, which retails
for about $5,000, will improve a person's quality of life and mobility.
The Department of Veterans Affairs has evaluated the Segs4Vets program but
has yet to offer an opinion on their therapeutic value. The VA is
considering testing Segways with older veterans who have a wider range of
disabilities, says Kendra Betz, who led the VA team that performed the
evaluation.
Heniser, who evaluates and trains Segway-using patients, says the machines
help injured veterans stay on their feet and out of wheelchairs.
Joy Ilem handles health-related issues for the Disabled American Veterans,
a Washington-based lobbying and service organization. She questioned
whether Segs4Vets recipients would overuse the devices. Clinicians often
shun electric wheelchairs and scooters in favor of walking or manual
wheelchairs so patients increase stamina and independence, Ilem says.
"It's not being mean; it's wanting them to be as physically fit as
possible," she says.
Veterans who've used the device say it has made their lives easier and
less painful. And, most important they say it allows them to work toward
goals instead of on mere mobility.
Ryan Groves was a Marine infantry squad leader when a rocket attack in
Fallujah on Oct. 17, 2004, mangled his legs. He lost one leg, and the
other is fused at the knee.
Today, Groves, 27, is taking law classes at Georgetown University in
Washington, D.C., where a five-minute walk for most people takes him 15 or
20 minutes. And at the end of it, "I'm usually hurting pretty good," he
says.
He says the Segway, which he had painted Marine red and gray, has made "a
huge difference."
"I can zoom from the parking lot to the library in two minutes," he says.
"There are events I go to where everyone's standing up and socializing and
talking, where if I had to walk I wouldn't feel like doing that. With the
Segway, I have a little more time for standing."
Kortney Clemons, 27, who studies at Penn State University, rejects the
idea that more walking, or using a wheelchair, might be healthier.
Clemons lost his leg in a roadside bomb south of Baghdad and now hopes to
compete in the 100-meter dash at the Beijing Paralympic Games in 2009. His
Segway " saves my energy for the end of the day so I can run and train,"
he says.
Some Segway recipients say they just prefer standing up to get around.
"If I'm in a wheelchair, people look down on me and think, 'Aw, too bad,'"
Castro says. "Now I'm in a Segway, they think it's cool."
-------------------------
Larry Scott --
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