HEALTH / ARTHRITIS
Tools, devices help arthritis patients get on with tasksLisa Bielstein knows that arthritis can make simple things, such as opening a jar or pruning a rose, a painful experience.
Diagnosed at age 29 with rheumatoid arthritis 10 years ago, the Dacula mom of three was racked with pain and fatigue for almost a year before doctors diagnosed her condition. But she wasn't about to give up on the things she loved to do. On medication to prevent joint damage, she has learned to look for tools that help her adapt to her daily tasks.
CURTIS COMPTON/AJC | ||||||
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Arthritis patient Lisa Bielstein uses a lightweight pruner with easy grips and long handles to trim a tree. She has several other tools that help her continue to garden. | ||||||
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"I look for everyday little things that can make life easier," she said.
To help her continue gardening, she has sought a bench with wheels; pruning shears and trowels that have big handles with soft grips; and soft-sided buckets that are easier to carry. In the kitchen, she uses lightweight pans, lever-style bottle and jar openers; and soft-handled utensils for cooking. "I invested in a signature stamp at work because I sign a lot of checks," she said. When she does write, she uses a large- barreled pen with a cushion grip.
Braces help reduce the stiffness and pain in her wrists and shore up her knees.
She can't afford to be sedentary, even with the stiffness, she said. She owns a business and keeps up with her three active sons.
"I have always been an extremely active person. I've been on the go since I was young," Bielstein said. Active in the Arthritis Foundation, Georgia chapter, she walked in the inaugural Gwinnett Arthritis Walk in May.
"Arthritis can just be so devastating — daily activities like getting a jar open can be painful. I want to get out and enjoy life," Bielstein said.
Dr. Hayes Wilson, chief of rheumatology at Piedmont Hospital, estimates that 1.7 million Georgians — about one in five — have some arthritic illness, causing their joints to become inflamed and painful. Of that 1.7 million, 9,200 are children with juvenile arthritis, according to the Arthritis Foundation, Georgia chapter.
Many of Wilson's patients are women like Bielstein. "Rheumatoid arthritis is a disease of young women of child-bearing years — one of the biggest misconceptions is it is a disease of older people," Wilson said.
People with arthritis often have to learn to use their body power in a different way to tackle projects and hobbies, he said. Avid walkers can switch to bikes; golfers with hand arthritis can use clubs with a bigger grip.
These days, ergonomic tools for everyday tasks are more readily available for people sidelined with injuries or those whose physical conditions, such as arthritis, limit mobility, said Debi Hinerfeld, president of the Georgia Occupational Therapy Association. (Occupational therapists help people become as independent as possible after an injury, disease, developmental delay or social/emotional crisis, she said.)
Hinerfeld remembers when adaptive tools were available only through her professional catalogs.
"When I started doing this, anything you bought [to aid patients] was out of a therapy catalog," she said. "Now you can buy these practically anywhere, even Wal-Mart."
Hinerfeld said, "The best tools for any job include those that allow a person to perform the work easily; being able to conserve energy, prevent injury and to do whatever that person wants to do in his or her life to live life to the fullest degree possible."
THINK ABOUT COMFORT, SIMPLICITY
Source: Arthritis Foundation
LOOK FOR WELL-DESIGNED EQUIPMENTAnyone can look for tools to make their everyday lives easier, occupational therapist Debi Hinerfeld notes. Although there is no "adaptive tools" aisle in stores, look for specific designs in everything from cooking utensils to gardening tools. They include:
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