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Journal Article

Citation

Hertig-Godeschalk A, Gemperli A, Arnet U, Hinrichs T. J. Spinal Cord Med. 2018; 41(1): 91-101.

Affiliation

Division of Sports and Exercise Medicine, Department of Sport, Exercise and Health , University of Basel , Basel , Switzerland.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Academy of Spinal Cord Injury Professionals, Publisher Maney Publishing)

DOI

10.1080/10790268.2017.1308995

PMID

28359190

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To identify the availability and unmet need of home adaptations (HAs) among the Swiss population with spinal cord injury (SCI).

DESIGN: Cross-sectional study. SETTING: Swiss Spinal Cord Injury Community Survey 2012. PARTICIPANTS: Individuals aged 16 or older with chronic SCI living in Switzerland. INTERVENTIONS: Not applicable. OUTCOME MEASURES: The availability of ten HAs (self-report) was analyzed by sex, age, living situation, indoor mobility, SCI severity, SCI etiology and time since SCI. The unmet need (self-report of not having a HA but needing it) of HAs was analyzed by financial hardship.

RESULTS: Among the 482 study participants (mean age 55.2 years, standard deviation 15.0 years, 71.6% males), 85.1% had at least one HA. The most frequent HA was a wheelchair accessible shower (62.7%). Availability of HAs markedly varied with indoor mobility (e.g. 38.4% of participants using a wheelchair had a stair lift compared to 17.4% of those walking) and with SCI severity (e.g. 54.8% of those with complete paraplegia had a wheelchair accessible kitchen worktop compared to 26.0% of those with incomplete paraplegia). Unmet need was highest for adjustable kitchen worktops (78.7% of those with a need) and adjustable kitchen cabinets (75.7%) and lowest for wheelchair accessible showers (9.4%) and grab bars next to the toilet (8.5%). No significant differences in unmet need were found when stratifying for financial hardship.

CONCLUSION: Availability of HAs is dependent on indoor mobility and SCI severity. There is a considerable degree of unmet need for selected HAs, which couldn't be explained by financial hardship.


Language: en

Keywords

Architectural accessibility; Disability; Disability and Health (ICF); International Classification of Functioning; Mobility limitation; Spinal cord injury

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