Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

'Nothing Can Stop Her:' Paralyzed Edmonton Tot A Whiz In Homemade Wheelchair

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Aug, 2016 11:58 AM
    EDMONTON — Evelyn Moore isn't the fastest kid on the racetrack, but she's by far the tiniest.
     
    At 13-months old, the paralyzed toddler skilfully wheels her homemade wheelchair around the simulated track at Treehouse, an indoor playground in northeast Edmonton that she often visits with her mom.
     
    Several school-age children whiz by on souped-up tricycles and she stops to stare and clap.
     
    "She really gets around now," says Kim Moore, who first put her daughter in the makeshift chair — basically a purple, foam Bumbo seat on wheels — at seven months.
     
    Just like other children learn how to crawl, Evelyn slowly figured out how to wheel.
     
    "She went backwards first and then she went forwards, and then she figured out how to turn," Moore says. "And now we have a speed bump in the middle of our living room because she just goes that fast."
     
    Evelyn — also called Eva by her family — was diagnosed with cancer following her four-month check up. A nurse noticed too much movement with the child's hips, then a doctor recognized a lump protruding from her spine.
     
    The stage 4 neuroblastoma tumour couldn't be removed, so she underwent eight rounds of chemotherapy.
     
    Although the cancer is in remission, Evelyn's family received more bad news: their first child is permanently paralyzed below her arms.
     
    It was heart-breaking, says Moore.
     
    "But then you go home and you cry and you come back the next day and be the strongest mom and dad you can ever be."
     
    Moore says doctors told her that Evelyn would likely "army crawl," pulling herself around with her arms, until she was about two. Wheelchairs would come after that.
     
    "I guess that wasn't a good enough answer for me," Moore says.
     
     
    She wanted her daughter to have some independence like other children.
     
    While searching on the social networking website Pinterest, she found photos of a do-it-yourself baby wheelchair and asked her husband, Brad, to build it. He spent a night in his garage attaching a second-hand Bumbo chair to a kitchen cutting board, then put casters on the bottom and small wheels from a children's bike on each side.
     
    It took a while for Evelyn to figure it out. Then one day Dad nudged her down the driveway and she was able to stop herself.
     
    She now waves her arms when she knows she's about to be put in her chair, and — able to only speak a few words like "dada" and "uh-oh" — tilts the chair back and forth, clicking the casters to show she's excited.
     
    The chair cost about $100 to make. As Evelyn gets bigger, she'll move into other chairs that will cost thousands of dollars.
     
    Her mother says they're preparing themselves for those bills.
     
    Dr. Bev Wilson, a pediatric oncologist, says she was amazed when Evelyn first came into her office in the chair, bumping into staff to get their attention. The doctor had never seen a child so young in a wheelchair.
     
    "She looked like any adult or older child would in a wheelchair," Wilson recalls. "She was turning around in circles, backing up."
     
    The chair gives Evelyn freedom, she says.
     
    "Normally, she would be propped in a chair or a seat or a stroller somewhere. This has allowed her to explore her environment just like a crawling child would."
     
    Wilson adds that she would recommend a "rigged up" wheelchair like Evelyn's to parents of other paralyzed youngsters.
     
    Brad Moore, away from home on a two-week work stretch at a diamond mine in the Northwest Territories, says over that phone that he's proud of his little girl.
     
    "The willpower that she has, and how adaptable she is to her situation, is something I never really expected. And how quickly she's grasping it has really blown me away."
     
    He wants her to grow up knowing that she can do anything, he says.
     
    "Nothing can stop her."

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Football players' performance written on their faces

    Football players' performance written on their faces
    The facial appearance of a football player may give us vital clues about his performance on the field - including his likelihood of scoring goals, making assists...

    Football players' performance written on their faces

    How mosquitoes evolved to love human odour

    How mosquitoes evolved to love human odour
    One reason why mosquitoes transitioned from harmless animal-biting insects into deadly vectors of human disease was their love for human body odour, says a new research....

    How mosquitoes evolved to love human odour

    The Art Of Silhouette Requires A Portraitist's Eye, Artistic Skills And A Scissors

    The Art Of Silhouette Requires A Portraitist's Eye, Artistic Skills And A Scissors
    The silhouette, an ancient form of portraiture, may be dying. Only a handful of artists have learned to cut these precision profiles — traditionally clipped from black paper and mounted on a white background — that were popularized in the 1800s in Europe and the United States.

    The Art Of Silhouette Requires A Portraitist's Eye, Artistic Skills And A Scissors

    Hilary Swank Co-hosts Star-studded Thanksgiving TV Special To Help Rescue Dogs Find Homes

    Hilary Swank Co-hosts Star-studded Thanksgiving TV Special To Help Rescue Dogs Find Homes
    LOS ANGELES — Oscar winner Hilary Swank is unleashing some serious star power to help rescue dogs get adopted by families who want to make a difference on Thanksgiving — or those who just want to watch terriers instead of touchdowns on TV.

    Hilary Swank Co-hosts Star-studded Thanksgiving TV Special To Help Rescue Dogs Find Homes

    Control genes with your thoughts

    Control genes with your thoughts
    Inspired by a brain game, researchers have developed a novel gene regulation method that enables thought-specific brain waves to control the process....

    Control genes with your thoughts

    Even doctors struggle to identify obesity

    Even doctors struggle to identify obesity
    Most people, including health care professionals, are unable to identify healthy weight, over-weight or obese people just by looking at them, says a research....

    Even doctors struggle to identify obesity