Category: Uncategorized (Page 3 of 5)

Vision Impaired Table Tennis Table “Swish”

Rory is 12 years old and blind. He plays Vision Impaired Table Tennis (“Swish”) at Kooyong and his family asked Tadvic to make a table for use at home.

Swish is played on a standard width (1.52m) table tennis table but the length is extended from to 2.74 to 3.66m.

A standard competition table tennis table was used as the starting point. This table comes in two separate rollaway sections for storage.

Standard Table

“Swish” has guide rails along the sides. Players use small bats and a plastic ball with holes and a rattle inside.

An additional half table top was purchased and cut to size to make the required table length and a rollaway steel frame was built to hold it and the “net” (which is a solid wall with a gap at the bottom).

The table width can be reduced to 1m for singles by inclusion of a rail on the table top.

Rory playing Singles on the modified table

Tadvic has since made 2 more tables for “Swish” Clubs around Melbourne. We have found Clubs play a lot harder than Rory did at the time, so the subsequent tables had to be built stronger.

We have also supplied details to a school in Queensland and to an organisation for the blind and visually impaired people in Romania. Please contact us if you would like detailed plans of our conversion process.

Autism Fidget Box

Our client is an adult with autism. He is non-verbal but very mobile.

His Occupational Therapist requested an arrangement of devices for aural, mental and physical stimulation.

Tadvic created a box with two lids and an open area in the middle to fit a future activity device. Various devices were fitted to the left-hand lid. Adjustable bolt & nut arrangements were placed on both front face ends. A ratchet wheel and bike bell were fitted.

The entire unit sits on a portable piano stand or can be placed on a table top or on the floor. The apparatus provides stimulus for the client with regard to movement, dexterity, audio and feel.

The Fidgit Box
Reverse Side
End

SUV Steps

Our client is 6 years old and has Cerebral Palsy. She cannot get into her family’s SUV independently. She is growing too big to be lifted into the vehicle.

We considered options like a footplate fixed to the vehicle but multiple steps were required.

Instead we modified a folding multi-step.  The legs were made extendable, so the steps could be used against a curb (as shown) or extended in situations like a car park. The top step goes across the car door sill and is retained against the inside.

The steps in place

The steps fold flat for storage in the vehicle with the wheelchair.

Vale Geoff Hook

It is with sadness that Tadvic acknowledges the sudden passing of our co-founder and President Geoff Hook.

Geoff was President from our incorporation in 2016 until his death on the 1st of October.

Geoff is fondly remembered by his Tadvic colleagues. Our deepest condolences go to Geoff’s family and friends.

Pointer for a person in a wheelchair to press a lift button

Our client uses a powered wheelchair and has limited hand
and arm movement. She often finds she cannot reach the buttons in lifts etc.

She tried a telescopic “pen” pointer that could fit into a
handbag. It was stiff enough to press a button but too stiff for her to extend
and retract.

Tadvic produced a 3 section pointer made from fibreglass tent poles. These remain connected via an elastic cord down the central core and are easily folded to fit in her handbag. When extended they are rigid.

Training Bath

Occupational Therapists at a major Melbourne public hospital requested a bath that could be used to train patients in wheelchairs to transfer to and from a bath. (The hospital has showers, but no standard baths.)

The bath is not plumbed in (i.e. it is used for “dry runs”). It must meet hospital infection control standards. The bath unit could not have any exposed timber and all surfaces must be able to be wiped down with the hospital approved cleaning product which is bleach based.

A standalone bath was considered as a solution but they tend to have higher sides than clients would encounter at home. This approach was rejected.

The hospital bought the majority of required materials and Tadvic agreed to construct the bath support/surround. The bath sits on rubber tipped feet and can be moved if required. Training can be with a bath bench (as shown) or a bath board.

The training bath with a bath bench

Wheelchair connection to a baby stroller

Our client is paraplegic and uses a manual and a powered wheelchair. She has just had her first baby and asked Tadvic to provide a connection between the wheelchairs and a stroller so she can move her child around.

To enable steering, the fixed rear wheels need to be off the ground and the stroller turns on its swivel front wheels. We provided connections for each wheelchair.

For the powered wheelchair our client drives the footplate under the rear axle of the stroller and lifts the axle with the powered footplate. When not using the stroller the connection folds back flat with the footplate.

Google Home as Assistive Technology

Our client has MS and is very immobile. He lives in Nursing Home. His NDIS Support Co-ordinator gathered the equipment and partially setup a Google Home environment to control:

  1. his smart TV via a Logitech Harmony hub (turn on, turn off, change channel etc)
  2. a lamp via a smart switch (turn on, turn off).
    using voice commands.

A simple change to the WiFi network by the Nursing Home disrupted what was achieved, so the Co-ordinator asked Tadvic to help.

He also asked if voice control could:

  1. activate the nurse call button
  2. make internet based calls by voice on a tablet.

Tadvic got the TV and lamp controls working again and provided documentation.

We then used a commercial Google Home compatible switch and some simple electronics to provide a voice activated nurse call. It works in parallel with the existing manual button (i.e. either can be used), noting that Google Home is not always as reliable as a purpose built and dedicated manual switch.

We investigated internet based calls – it is a feature Google Home supports in the USA and Canada (and soon the UK) but is not yet supported in Australia. Given it is likely to be available soon in Australia we felt it was not worth attempting to create a custom solution.

Google Home (and Apple Siri and Amazon Alexa etc) can all do the above and answer countless questions like “What’s the weather”.

This is a rapidly advancing technology that has enormous potential for people with limited movement.

The Support Co-ordinator said “I can’t tell you how pleased I have been with the prompt response to my request for help. I believe that this emerging and ever changing technology space is perfect for use by many people with disabilities as is the case here. TADVIC and the volunteer have been amazing in the quick response and result achieved in an area that has few experts. Keep up the good work and Thank you.

Grab Handle for SUV

Our client had a stroke impacting one side and he uses a grab handle that fits in his car door frame to move in and out. He just replaced his car with an SUV and found the handle is too far from the ground.

Grab Handle pre modification

Our volunteer quickly modified the grab handle so that it is the required height.

Grab Handle Post Modification

Our client said “I am very happy with my new Grab Handle and appreciate the work the volunteer did for me and how prompt he was”.

Wheelchair Access to Cubby

Our client is 11 years old and she enjoys playing in a large cubby house with her younger sister. Her wheelchair fits through the cubby porch but unfortunately not the cubby door and she has grown too big for her Mum to carry her through the door.

The problem

Tadvic narrowed the windows to the side and widened the door so the wheelchair now fits through the door.

The original door
The widened door with smaller windows
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