Improved Mealtimes for the Spastic Patient:
Help is on the Way...With Adaptive Dinnerware
By Chris Wright, published Dec 24, 2007
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Nobody ever said it was easy to experience spastic symptoms related to a stroke or other condition. As a person with a spastic condition--or as a caregiver, patient, or parent of a person who suffers from this--the world often seems cruelly designed against your best efforts. Buttons, zippers, knives, forks, plates, light bulbs, and writing implements are but a few of the things in this world which require some degree of fine or gross motor skills. The most difficult time, as you may know, are those three times of the day called breakfast, lunch, and dinner.
Yet a person with spastic symptoms can find tableware-plates, dishes, bowls- that nearly all address the problems that they may have in connection with mealtimes.
The Problem of Failed Adaptive Tableware
Many companies which claim to manufacture special types of tableware for those with spastic conditions apparently have never field-tested their products. Time and again, these so-called suction cup devices and non-slip pads designed to adhere plates and bowls to tables-simply do not work. Not only that, but the plates and bowls themselves are constructed from inferior materials which cannot withstand dishwasher or microwave use.
Enter a company called Freedom Dinnerware. Freedom's designers and scientists have been able to create a line of bowls, plates, and dishes for the spastic person which truly do the job they claim to do!
Why don't conventional suction cup systems work? Why are non-slip pads mainly a failure? Freedom has investigated the issue and has come up with a brilliant solution.
Freedom has designed a two-part vacuum pad system so unusual that it is wholly unlike the suction cup system. The first part is the suction pad. The second part is the item of tableware itself. The tableware screws onto the patented vacuum as easily as screwing a lid on a jar. Then, the suction pad grips easily to any flat, clean, smooth surface with a slight amount of pressure. Want to take it off? Easy. Simply lift one corner of the pad, and the vacuum pad will release the pressure.
Unbreakable - Microwavable - Washable
More by Chris Wright
- Fifteen Facts About: Adaptive Tableware for Children
- Taking Your Questions About...Non-Skid Divider Plates
- Muscular Dystrophy and Meals: How Patients Can Overcome Difficulties and Improve Nutrition
- Adapted Plates and Bowls Provide Mealtime Independence for Stroke Survivors
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