Thanks everyone for your suggestions
regarding switches! Also thanks Margaret as I hadn’t even
thought about
mounting.
Victoria
Victoria Edwards
Advanced Specialist Speech & Language
Therapist
Speech & Language Therapy
Department
Box 198
Addenbrooke's Hospital
Hills Road
Cambridge
CB2 0QQ
01223 216200
From:
xxxxxx@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:xxxxxx@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Margaret Cotts
Sent: 27 January 2012
20:43
To:
xxxxxx@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: RE:
Switches
I wanted to
share a
switch solutions that I was a little proud of:
(It’s at
1:38 into
the video)
http://lowtechsolutions.org/pages/home/connie2.html
For a long time,
Connie activated her switch adapted call button with a pillow switch, using
her
head. Her head movement became more limited, and it wasn’t
feasible for
her anymore. I ended up velcroing a microlight switch inside of her
AFO- she
activated it with her toe.
Some clever ones
that my clients came up with-
1.
A client who was quadriplegic, but still
had
good head movement. He would wear a bandana around his neck, and his wife
pinned a pillow switch to it. He activated it with his
chin.
2.
I had a client who had almost no hand
movement. He put wallet under the palm of his hand (to raise it up),
and
a pillow switch under the pad/wrist of his hand. I ended up using
this
combination with a number of other clients. (I think I have a video of this
somewhere, I’ll see if I can find it.)
Alisa, if ALSA
doesn’t have a website where we could post pictures, I’d be
happy to put up a
little area on my website that only people on the listserv can access. I
could
post pictures there….
Margaret
--
Margaret
Cotts
Low Tech Solutions
phone:
(510)
681-3639
| email: xxxxxx@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
lowtechsolutions.org |
store.lowtechsolutions.org
From:
xxxxxx@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:xxxxxx@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Amy Roman
Sent: Friday, January 27, 2012
8:52 AM
To:
xxxxxx@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re:
Switches
I like margaret's idea of posting clever and
effective
switch placements. Can we post pictures? Or maybe we could post them
on a
Facebook wall? I
Sent from my iPhone
Hi
Victoria-
When I worked
with
people with ALS, the 2 switches I used the most frequently were spec
switches
and pillow switches. (There are 2 kinds of switches called a pillow
switch. The one I found useful was the gray one, not the green one.).
Another switch that I used frequently was the Tash
microlight.
I especially
found
the pillow switch useful for people who very limited fine motor skills, but
still had some gross motor function.
(It would be
great
if we had a thread on all the really creative ways our clients have used
switches… I had some clients come up with some really clever
solutions on their
own… I had a few creative switch placements that I was proud
of…. I
always thought it would be great to have a website, showing photographs of
different examples of switch placement, and giving instructions for how to
do a
switch assessment.)
P.S. If you are
going to have a loan library, it would be useful to have switch mounts
also.
--
Margaret
Cotts
Low Tech Solutions
phone:
(510)
681-3639
| email: xxxxxx@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
lowtechsolutions.org |
store.lowtechsolutions.org
HI all,
I am in the process of trying to set
up a
loan bank of switches at our MND clinic in Cambridge. I was wondering
what switches would be top of your list (taking into consideration how
frequently you would provide them to patients) if you had to set up a
collection.
Thanks!
Victoria
Victoria
Edwards
Advanced Specialist
Speech
& Language Therapist
Speech & Language
Therapy Department
Box
198
Addenbrooke's
Hospital
Hills Road
Cambridge
CB2
0QQ
01223
216200