Mines a Quickie 2 which only weighs 26 lbs but it looks and feels very solid
and sturdy.
Kat
On Tuesday 30 November 2004 7:35 am, Elizabeth Thiers wrote:
> Most newer chairs are much more than the typical cart you around the
> hospital chair. The lighter frame, better bearings, cushion, etc. The
> other chairs the African women use are based more on bicycles and are a
> triage effort of its better than crawling on the ground. RESNA, the Rehab
> engineers society of North America sponsors a student contest to develop
> cushions using materials one would find in a third world country.
>
> Beth t the OT
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: St. John's University Cerebral Palsy List
> [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Kathy
> Sent: Monday, November 29, 2004 9:37 PM
> To: [log in to unmask]
> Subject: Re: wheelchair foundation
>
> The markup's probably right as my insurance paid 80% of it and I paid the
> rest. Ouch! But I don't have any leather on mine - just aluminum, rubber
> and vinyl. No leather at all. Man, I feel cheated. Humph.
>
> But I have seen chairs that cost something like $200 and must say they look
> awfully flimsy to me.
>
> On Monday 29 November 2004 8:03 pm, Tamar Raine wrote:
> > Kathy,
> > 3,000 for a manual chair - that is like a huge mark up --- think about
> > it. After all, what could possibly be so expensive, a lot of plastic, a
> > bit of metal, and some leather. I just got my new power chair, it is a
> > pronto sure step. and it is wonderful! it can go up three inch lips on
> > driveways, etc.
> >
> > I imagine they get the chairs at cost and then give them away. I saw a
> > film about how African women with disabilities are forming co-ops to
> > make wheelchairs themselves, and you can bet they don't cost 3 grand.
> >
> > ~Tamar Mag Raine
> > [log in to unmask]
> > IM: tamarmag48
> > Oakland Mayor's Commission on People with disabilities
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