Design and development of mobility equipment for persons with disabilities in low-resource and tropical settings: bamboo wheelchairs.
Marjelle F ScheffersKimberly E Ona AyalaTaylor D OttesenYetsa A Tuakli-WosornuPublished in: Disability and rehabilitation. Assistive technology (2019)
The final prototypes received positive testing reviews from daily manual wheelchair users in Ghana. These locally-built, safe, economical bamboo wheelchairs have the potential to improve accessibility, provide more independence and reduce immobility-related health risks for many.Implications for rehabilitationPersons with disabilities have a right to mobility, maximum independence, and the psychological, emotional, and physical health benefits of physical activity those rights confer.For persons with disabilities in low-resource settings, barriers to mobility and physical activity are steep, due to social stigmatization and the cost and adaptability of equipment.Bamboo wheelchairs have the potential to increase access to mobility and physical activity by allowing wheelchairs to be efficiently produced at cost, according to the user's needs.The aesthetics of bamboo wheelchairs can help reduce social stigma by avoiding the "medicalization" of wheelchairs and other traditional mobility devices.