d
April 16, 2007
3:20 p.m. ET
By The Associated Press
CHARLESTON, W.V. (AP) - Three times a week, Vince Stankoski is
lifted from his wheelchair onto a stationary bicycle. Electrodes
are attached to three of his muscle groups, coaxing his paralyzed
legs to pedal.
It is the highlight of his workout.
"I like that I can look down at my legs and still see muscles
there," says the Allentown, Pa., man who lost the use of his legs
after falling from a tree in 1998.
Apart from the bike, he also likes using the upper body weights,
which come equipped with a seat that swivels away so he can move
his wheelchair into position and lift.
Stankoski is one of the fortunate ones. He belongs to a gym
specifically designed to accommodate people with disabilities.
Few other disabled people have that option. The basics of good
health -- diet and exercise -- often present challenges for people
with disabilities, a situation made more difficult by a common
assumption that disability and poor health go hand in hand.
The result, according to the federal Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention, is that people with disabilities -- roughly 19
percent of all Americans -- are far less healthy than the average
American. Since those with disabilities are the biggest users of
medical services, that disparity could be costing hundreds of
millions of tax dollars a year.
Those costs are likely to increase as the baby boomer generation
grows older and more susceptible to disabilities.
"There's an enormous number of barriers that people with
disabilities face when they try to become healthy," says Dr. James
Rimmer, director of the National Center on Physical Activity &
Disability, and a professor at the University of Illinois at
Chicago.
Those barriers range from health clubs that view people with
disabilities as potential liabilities to public health campaigns
that bypass them entirely.
"There's a mind-set that people with disabilities are also ill and
they shouldn't be exercising," says Jerry McCole, who heads the
National Disability Sports Alliance. The group promotes athletic
competition and physical activity among people with cerebral
palsy, traumatic brain injury, stroke and other physically
disabling conditions.
"It's like any minority group -- out of sight, out of mind,"
McCole says.
But people with disabilities are increasingly hard to overlook. In
a first-of-its-kind study released last fall, the CDC found that
those with disabilities were more than four times more likely to
be in fair or poor health than those who are not disabled. Those
with disabilities were also more likely to smoke and to be obese
and physically inactive. In West Virginia, the numbers are even
worse.
Deborrah Pittman, head of the computer science department at
Bluefield State College in West Virginia, was diagnosed with
multiple sclerosis in 1997 and sometimes uses a wheelchair. She
lives in a state where one in four adults is disabled, the highest
rate in the country.
Pittman says she's lucky that a gym in Bluefield, near the
Virginia border, has one or two pieces of equipment she can use to
get an upper body workout.
Part of the problem, according to experts, is the common
assumption that people with disabilities are simply unable to take
on physical tasks.
"People with disabilities can be healthy, and people without
disabilities can be unhealthy," says John Crews, a lead scientist
for the CDC's Disability and Health Team. But the perception
persists, even in public health, that the opposite is true.
"Public health has a kind of uncomfortable relationship with
disability. People with disabilities tend to be viewed by people
in public health as a failure of primary prevention," Crews said.
That's starting to change. In January, Rimmer and a group of
doctors and advocates launched the Inclusive Fitness Coalition to
urge private health clubs and gyms to make universal accessibility
part of their basic service.
At places such as Optimal Fitness, where Stankoski works out,
that's already happening. Optimal Fitness is part of Good
Shepherd, an acute care rehabilitation hospital. The fitness
center is open to hospital patients and employees, but also to
anyone with a qualifying disability.
There's no nearby exercise alternative for people like Stankoski.
The next nearest place is 60 miles away in Philadelphia.
"Things changed really fast for me," Stankoski says, recalling the
accident that paralyzed him. But rehabilitation and regular
fitness have helped him to stay trim and muscular.
"Since I started here, everything's been going good," he says.
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