Dear Bobby, I would respond. My wife Robin and I are cerebral palsied from birth. I classify Robin as hemiplegic, as her right side is affected. She is also spastic, her spastcity affecting her upper and lower digestive tracts, in that she has occasional difficulty in swallowing and has a tendency toward constipation, and is taking Lactulose and calcium magnesium multivitamins to correct her lower bowels. She displays very little ataxia or athetosis, but she has a seizure condition which she controls very well with Tegretol, and she is under close supervision of her primary care physician and a neurologist. I, on the other hand, have considerable ataxia and spasticity in my lower extremities and must use a sock aid and a dressing stick to pull on socks and trousers. Robin assists me with my left shoe, while I can pull on my right shoe, but I must pull my right leg over my left leg to draw the shoe on. We both have balance and coordination problems; mine are more severe than Robin's. Our speech is clear and we are able to communicate without minimal, if any, effort. We both volunteer 10 hours per week at the Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center and Robin personally escorts visitors and their families to their doctors and clinics, as a lobby hostess for Information and Admissions and she literally walks all over the Medical Center. I am a volunteer librarian at a resource center for the Section on Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine. In short, Robin is spastc and hemiplegic, while I am spastic and ataxic, and quadriplegic, as I have limited use of both hands. My CP is largely concentrated in my lower extremities. We regret we have been so dilatory in posting to the discussion group. We paint a lot, produced seven artworks within the last year, one of which was scanned into the document that contained my late father-in-law's autobiography and have entered three of those art works into a local juried show for artists with disabilities. We work in acrylics and produce landscapes and seascapes, sing in our church choir and participate in activities in our retirement home, singing with their vocal group among those activities. I will do a better job in future of responding to messages received by the group. Sincerely. Robin and Bill Ach On Thu, 4 Jul 2002 20:36:48 EDT "BG Greer, PhD" <[log in to unmask]> writes: >Hey Guys, > > I am just tallying up the responses to the survey Carla did and I >only >downloaded 10 completed surveys. Not a great response for a list with >300+ >members. > > I am considering a new survey with "check-off" responses, compared >open >ended responses which characterized the one done earlier. > > For those of you unfamiliar with different types of question, here >is an >example of the same question worded in the 2 different forms: > > Qpen ended: > > "Name the degree and type of CP you have." > > Check-off type: > > "Type of CP > > Spastic > > Athetoid > > Ataxic > > Mixed > > Location > > Quadriplegia > > Hemiplegia > > Diplegia > > Other" > > > Bow how many of you would repond to such a survey? > > >Bobby ________________________________________________________________ GET INTERNET ACCESS FROM JUNO! Juno offers FREE or PREMIUM Internet access for less! Join Juno today! For your FREE software, visit: http://dl.www.juno.com/get/web/.