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Posts Tagged ‘healthcare’

Stairlifts And Other Things You Might Need To Improve Your Mobility

March 14th, 2010 No comments

When you or one of your relatives is suffering from mobility issues, it is very important to equip your house so that you can move around it. However, the main feature that must be taken into consideration when you adapt your house to your mobility problems is your own safety.

Handrails are one of the key-features that need installing when you are adapting your home to make it easier to stand up on slippery services. They can prove very useful in the bathroom or the kitchen, as they provide you with a firm grip to hold onto and therefore prevent falls.

Walk-in showers also prove to be a useful addition to your home if you have a mobility problem that makes it difficult for you to stand-up. They are generally tailor-made to suit your needs and can be fitted with handrails and grabs so that you would be able to stand up under the shower.

Stairlifts enable you to get up and down the stairs inside your house, granting you access to every room and every floor within your house. What's more, some models of stairlifts can be adapted to curved staircases and outdoor staircases too; therefore allowing you to access your garden or your backyard. Furthermore, a stairlift can also be used if you have trouble bending your knees as some stairlift manufacturers can provide you with a perch model stairlift, which would enable you to stand on the stairlift.

Devices such as stairlifts, walk-in showers and bathtubs and handrails and grabs contribute to making your home a safer place to live in as they all contribute to preventing falls that could result in fractures. What's more, they also allow you more freedom as they enable you to get easier access to every room in your house without needing any outside help. In addition to these devices, it is also recomended to have a walking stick handy because it will provide extra support for you whilst you are walking around the house.

Visit the Acorn Stairlifts UK site to find out more on how to improve your mobility around the house.

Private Autism Diagnosis

January 22nd, 2010 No comments

Anyone with Autism? I am trying to get a diagnosis; if your GP refused to even contemplate you having Autism, and just told you that you have acute anxiety and should move on....would you accept this or go private for a diagnosis? Thanks for answers, can anyone tell me how many sessions it might take to diagnose Asperger's with a private psychiatrist?

From what you're saying, it doesn't sound like autism or Asperger's to me. I don't really know why you're wanting this specific diagnosis. When, most people with (any kind of) problems go to doctors with their symptoms, the doctor figures out what they should/shouldn't be diagnosed with.

Anyway, if you really Asperger, you would have many of the following symptoms: - Problems with the non-verbal communication, gestures, tone of voice, posture, facial expressions - Stuttering and hesitating / difficulty with small talk - Logical and objective view on all that difficult to see how things come across (from elsewhere s) of view - Intensive (or compulsion) interest / fascination with a narrow / specific subject - Knowledge / interest in a particular subject area without regard for its proper context - Away / deep / up-in-the-clouds thinking - Delayed communication (ie, took longer to talk / make / etc) - Hypersensitivity (ie can not tolerate noise or bright light) - Ritual routines / compulsive traits / can not know with what is expected to finish - Odd behavior / habits / thinking / - Excessive daydreaming / in their own world.

There are probably some other symptoms I missed, but anxiety / depression is often a result of having social difficulties. People with such symptoms fail to fit in - they often experience bullying and rejection and therefore can go through anger, depression, bitterness, social anxiety, and the like.

Bottom line is, if the only symptoms you have are social anxiety / depression, then you are far better off dealing with those issues as they are. Being diagnosed with something like autism has major drawbacks.

This is a biggest , including over 30,000 info items resource for all special needs, including autism, down syndrome and other disabilities. The evidence of social anxiety or depression are far better to address than being diagnosed with autism.