Texarkana Gazette

Mom has advice for making a home disabled accessible

- By Alison Bowen

CHICAGO — When Laura Sickel Baumann got the phone call in 2018, she first knew she needed to get her son back to Chicago.

He’d been injured in an accident in New Orleans. She eventually arranged a flight back to Chicago, where after surgery, he was taken directly to Shirley Ryan AbilityLab to begin rehabilita­tion.

It was the first of many logistical puzzles in caring for her adult son, who suffered a spinal cord injury. Where would he live? How do they get a wheelchair? And how would he wheel it into their Evanston house? When he was finally home, how could they make their house’s interior meet his new needs?

Families who face a severe injury with life-changing needs, or a family member whose health is deteriorat­ing, often are faced with serious and sudden costs as they confront renovating their homes and adapt to pressing needs.

For Sickel Baumann, this meant adding a ramp to the backyard, and making the first floor of the home a place where her son could live.

They were lucky, said Sickel Baumann — with her experience as a designer and her husband’s as an architect, they were aware of how to make their home accessible, widening door widths, updating bathroom fixtures and changing the height of light switches.

“We know how to draw what needs to happen. We know clearances and all that sort of thing,” she said. “I thought so much about other people, because we were fortunate enough that we could do this on our end, and that we had resources.”

At Shirley Ryan AbilityLab, people arrive after lives change in minutes — a gunshot wound, a car crash, a stroke. When patients are discharged, they often need to approach their home differentl­y. Occupation­al therapist Kelsey Watters said they first consider locations like the bathroom and the entry.

“Here in Chicago, we have a lot of walk-up units. Sometimes there are stairs before you enter,” Watters said. “Some of those very simple things can often be most challengin­g.”

Within the home, people consider entire renovation­s or smaller changes, Watters said, like adding accessible shelving in a kitchen or a tub bench in the shower.

“Instead of having to do a full remodel and put in a walk-in shower, somebody could just swing their legs over the edge of the tub and access the shower,” Watters said.

Occupation­al therapists also help patients think through whether they can operate things like light switches, television­s and computers. For example, someone with a spinal cord injury might have limited reach or hand control; a person with a traumatic brain injury might not have the cognition for organizing the home and figuring out appliances.

“Each situation is so unique,” said Janet Bischof-Rosario, an occupation­al therapist. She said they try to think of the simplest fixes, because this can be overwhelmi­ng for families.

“It’s definitely a big stress,” she said. When Gerry Labedz’s wife began to lose her ability to stand and walk after living for years with the brain cancer glioblasto­ma, they began making adjustment­s to their West Rogers Park home. An occupation­al therapist visited their home and gave them advice on what to do to make the situation safer, Labedz said.

“She was in a wheelchair and, let me tell you, life changes from no wheelchair to wheelchair, just super dramatic,” he said.

The first thing they needed was a ramp. He learned there was a lot to know about ramps. First, they must align with the Americans With Disabiliti­es Act guidelines. Options exist: Some get a folding ramp; others rent a ramp, but Labedz found ADA-compliant rentals very expensive.

Their home had only three steps leading up to it, and before the ramp, it would take four people to help his wife into the house, he said. A carpenter friend built them a ramp that stretched all the way to the sidewalk.

“It’s all overwhelmi­ng, when it happens,” said Labedz, whose wife died in 2019.

Renovation­s like these can be expensive, and time intensive. Although financial help for home modificati­ons is available in some areas for people older than 60, when a younger person is ill or injured, support can be harder to find.

During her own search for informatio­n and resources, Sickel Baumann said she found a lot lacking. She was surprised at the lack of financial help available, especially for young people. She learned so much over the course of two years, she has considered hosting informatio­nal sessions for people in similar situations.

The first thing to think about, she said, is the steps to get someone in a home.

“The golden rule is you have to be able to get into the living space,” she said.

Many people need a ramp or a lift. Other questions to consider: Could the person live on the first floor without too many costly renovation­s, and in a space offering enough privacy? Baumann and her family made a bathroom accessible on the first floor, so that her son didn’t need to navigate stairs.

“It’s very important that people assess what the needs are of their particular person,” she said. “Our son is only 21 years old, so he’s very hardy. He could easily get on a mechanical lift and come up. But elderly people, you have to think, would they be able to operate that by themselves?”

The family also considered her son’s overall wellbeing. He could no longer visit his “cool-guy cave in the basement,” she said. But he wanted a place to meet friends, so they extended their patio and set up furniture in his now-bedroom, to create places for him and his friends to hang out.

They also chose the back route for him to enter the home, because her son did not want a ramp in front of the house. “He didn’t want people to perceive that he was not able to be a functionin­g citizen. He’s very, very sensitive to that.

“He is an amazing human being,” she said. “It’s been a journey, but he is a great guy.”

“It’s very important that people assess what the needs are of their particular person,” she said. “Our son is only 21 years

old, so he’s very hardy. He could easily get on a mechanical lift and come up. But elderly people, you have to think, would they be able to operate that by themselves?”

—Sickel Baumann

 ?? Dreamstime ?? A home wheelchair ramp must align with the Americans With Disabiliti­es Act guidelines.
Dreamstime A home wheelchair ramp must align with the Americans With Disabiliti­es Act guidelines.

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