wheelchair header graphic

Getting To Know The Quickie Wheelchair
By Dave Kettner

A can be that item that gives the fullest array motion and action to disabled persons the world round than they have ever had before, and a Quickie brand should be no different but in fact should be better, a that you never find uncomfortable or even the slightest bit hesitant in the movement of where you might wish to go.  One thing that a must be

Article continued below...

Some antidepressants may raise cataract risk: study
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - People who take certain drugs for depression known as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) may have a higher-than-average risk of developing cataracts, a study from Canada hints.


absolutely capable of is that ability to move your person around to and fro, wherever you wish to go, and not hold you back at all from getting done what requires a certain sense of quickness that very few chairs other than a Quickie designed could.

Sometimes the easiest way to get from one point to another is through the use of wheels to move you about simply and easily, whether you find yourself needing to get into a building requiring you to utilize a ramp system, or you find yourself disabled through means that the situation may have allowed little to no control over the event taking place even though you happen to feel the need for that control returned in another form.  The Quickie wheelchairs are known for being a reliable option in the needs to get where wish to go when other means just won’t do, but you can’t just stay still, that is where a Quickie would cone in handy for mobility’s sake.

The Quickie Company has revolutionized the foundations of the industry over the past twenty years, and even after the being bought out by Sunrise Medical, founder Marilyn Hamilton has not been diminished through her achievements in starting the Quickie revolution and the many awards she has received over that time.  After an accident left her paralyzed, Marilyn began a group to help youth in wheelchairs overcome negative feelings and challenging situations as a result of life in a wheelchair, but through her efforts and her innovations she has truly struck out as few disabled people have be able to in success.




Here are some more wheelchair articles...
Wheelchair Accessible Discussions
By Dave Kettner
The journal of Advanced Engineering Informatics at Stanford published an article entitled “A performance-based approach to wheelchair accessible route analysis” in 2002.  This article has Read more...
Finding Adequate Wheelchair Rental
By Dave Kettner
There are many parts to the greater whole that functions in this world as the component of wheelchairs, their use in everyday life and the understanding of the device as a means of motion, and to Read more...
Finding Adequate Wheelchair Rental
By Dave Kettner
There are many parts to the greater whole that functions in this world as the component of wheelchairs, their use in everyday life and the understanding of the device as a means of motion, and to Read more...
Getting To Know The Quickie Wheelchair
By Dave Kettner
A wheelchair can be that item that gives the fullest array motion and action to disabled persons the world round than they have ever had before, and a Quickie brand wheelchair should be no Read more...

Some antidepressants may raise cataract risk: study
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - People who take certain drugs for depression known as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) may have a higher-than-average risk of developing cataracts, a study from Canada hints. African Americans get fewer heart-protecting drugs
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Even within the U.S. Veterans Affairs health system, where everyone should have the same access to care, African Americans are less likely than their white counterparts to be prescribed heart-protecting medications or undergo bypass surgery to treat blocked heart arteries, a new study finds.Screening for rare fatal disease too costly: study
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Screening all pregnant women for a rare but fatal genetic disease is too expensive, researchers say in a new report that adds to a recent controversy about whether genetic tests are worth the cost.Sleep apnea as common as asthma in German kids
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - A new German study suggests that about 3 percent of school-age children may have the nighttime breathing disorder sleep apnea -- similar to the country's rate of childhood asthma.