Posts for Tag: Stroke

Storied Chair Designer Invents a New Crutch | Fast Company

Jeff Weber spotted a design rarity: The market opportunity is massive, and the products out there are terrible.

Weber Mobilegs crutches

When Jeff Weber suffered an injury to his left foot five years ago, he was given a set of standard crutches from the hospital. But the crutches were uncomfortable and seemed to only add ergonomic insult to the original injury: Weber's hands chaffed and his wrists ached because of poorly designed, badly placed grips. “All in all, it was a pretty awful experience,” he recalls.

Weber is a seating designer by trade, and apprenticed to Bill Stumpf, a legendary pioneer of ergonomic design and co-creator of the famed Aeron chair for Herman Miller; later, the two created the Aeron's heir, the Embody. It's no surprise that Weber set his sights on crutches, which account for $320 million annual sales on 10 million units in the U.S. alone.

The real news comes in the last paragraph, though:

Weber figures that by capturing just a tiny fraction of the market, he can quickly create a company doing $10,000,000 a year in revenue. And armed with $800,000 in angel investments, Weber plans to turn his new company, Mobi, into a full-on mobility startup: Look for a cane, walker, and wheelchair under the Mobi brand later this year.

We'll keep our eyes open.

Matthew Sanford's Story, The Body's Grace. Accident victim learns to "live in his whole body again despite irreversible paralysis."

I now experience a different, more subtle connection between mind and body. It does not require that I flex muscles. It does not dissipate in the presence of increasing inward silence.

… It does require, however, that I seek more profoundly within my own experience and do so with an open mind. It means that I must reach intuitively into what may feel like darkness.

Matthew Sanford told an amazing story on Speaking of Faith this morning that so far I've only heard in dribs and drabs. Krista Tippett's introduction was "We explore what he's learned about the grace of the human body — even through trauma and aging." This sounds like a story tailor-made for me, and I can hardly wait to give it the attention it deserves.

Virtual Rehab

Natl Stroke Assoc (@natlstrokeassoc)
3/9/10 19:07
Virtual rehab! Take a look at this new stroke rehab technology -- virtual tennis balls!... http://bit.ly/chzba1

I am totally intrigued by the possibilities here. Seems like a big part of therapy is helping the client understand and believe in what's possible. (And I have to admit that I hated some of the stuff I did in rehab with real tennis balls. Sometimes the exercise can feel more limiting than liberating.)