The Peterborough Examiner

Wheelchair should not be barrier to fitness

Canadian research aims to help people with spinal cord injuries get fit

- CAMILLE BAINS THE CANADIAN PRESS Twitter@CamilleBai­ns1

VANCOUVER — People with spinal cord injuries now have a set of exercise guidelines for maintainin­g heart health to match those offered to the general population decades ago.

Kathleen Martin Ginis, a researcher at the University of British Columbia’s Okanagan campus, led an internatio­nal committee that recommends 30 minutes of moderate to vigorous intensity aerobic exercise, three times a week, for people with spinal cord injuries.

That’s compared with 150 minutes of cardiovasc­ular exercise every week for others, as recommende­d by the World Health Organizati­on.

Martin Ginis said the new guidelines are in addition to recommenda­tions she helped come up with in 2011 for people with spinal cord injuries through her work at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ont.

She presented her latest research on Oct. 26, in Dublin at the annual meeting of the Internatio­nal Spinal Cord Society.

Martin Ginis worked with a team that included participan­ts from Canada, the United Kingdom, the Netherland­s, Sweden, Italy and the United States.

Besides her own work, the team analyzed 211 studies examining the effects exercise on cardioresp­iratory fitness, muscle strength, bone health, body compositio­n and cardiovasc­ular risk factors for people with spinal cord injuries.

That population faces significan­t barriers when it comes to exercise, starting with transporta­tion to a gym, or navigating wheelchair­s on sidewalks without ramps, Martin Ginis said in an interview.

Gyms often exclude people with disabiliti­es, but could accommodat­e them with adaptable equipment and knowledgea­ble staff, she said.

“If there are ways to get into a facility there are ways to adapt standard exercise equipment for people with spinal cord injuries, at least for strength training,” Martin Ginis said.

Martin Ginis called the Abilities Centre in Whitby, Ont., the “gold standard” of gyms because of its inclusive programmin­g that includes arm ergometers, or socalled arm bikes, included in spin classes.

“It means they don’t have to request for someone to pull an arm ergometer in and make a big fuss out of it. The aerobics classes are integrated classes so people with all abilities will take an exercise class together with the same instructor,” she said.

The centre was a special project of former Conservati­ve finance minister Jim Flaherty, whose son John had health challenges after contractin­g encephalit­is as an infant.

Brad Skeats, 43, works out at the Physical Activity Research Centre gym, a Vancouver facility led by researcher­s at the Internatio­nal Collaborat­ion On Repair Discoverie­s, or ICORD.

His spinal cord was injured 20 years ago when he worked in a sporting goods store and a co-worker ran up from behind and tried to piggy back himself for fun.

“It was a pretty crazy, flukey accident. He landed on me the wrong way and that snapped my neck.”

Skeats, who went on to compete in wheelchair racing from 2000 to 2010, has a personal trainer and works out three times a week at the dedicated gym that was built in 2012.

 ?? DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Brad Skeats, who has a spinal cord injury, works out at the Physical Activity Research Centre at the Internatio­nal Collaborat­ion on Repair Discoverie­s, in Vancouver, B.C., on Wednesday.
DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS Brad Skeats, who has a spinal cord injury, works out at the Physical Activity Research Centre at the Internatio­nal Collaborat­ion on Repair Discoverie­s, in Vancouver, B.C., on Wednesday.
 ??  ?? Brad Skeats, who has a spinal cord injury, poses for a photograph at the Blusson Spinal Cord Centre at Vancouver General Hospital, in Vancouver, B.C., on Wednesday.
Brad Skeats, who has a spinal cord injury, poses for a photograph at the Blusson Spinal Cord Centre at Vancouver General Hospital, in Vancouver, B.C., on Wednesday.

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