Supporting Children With Disabilities Get "Fit For The Future"9286555
De BISAWiki
A fresh plan might help increase the lives of kids with disabilities-and help them better manage their health.
Sixty-six percent of adults with disabilities aren't really satisfied with their lives; 78 percent are unemployed; and they have increased health problems, including greater vulnerability to additional health dilemmas.
However, a new DVD will help increase the future outlook for children with disabilities. Named "Fit for the Future," it addresses two of the very important issues facing people who have disabilities today: health and employment. The DVD was released by Shriners Hospitals for Children and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).
"Fit for the Future" is supposed to be always a unique, progressive program that fills a void in available resources. The DVD contains three 20- to 30-minute, positive, kid-friendly exercise routines-stretching, conditioning and stamina-that can be done seated or standing. The exercise percentage of the DVD characteristics practitioners and clients from the Tampa Shriners Hospital, as well as FBI workers from Tampa, Fla., Washington, D.C., and Quantico, Va.
Informational sections are also included by the program on the Shriners fraternity, Shriners Hospitals for Children and the FBI.
The DVD features a second, equally crucial message of possible future work. Statistically, people with disabilities have the greatest unemployment rate (around 70 %). Learning that the FBI especially wants to retain people with disabilities is actually a tremendous way to obtain encouragement for children with disabilities.
While designed primarily for young ones with orthopaedic disabilities, "Fit for the Future" is definitely an exercise program virtually anyone can use. The exercise sessions included are general and simple enough to provide a starting point for a fitness routine.
There is a growing awareness of the significance of giving exercise opportunities for people with disabilities. "We believe that a course offering children with disabilities, in addition to the strong presence of an Agent as both role and spouse model, may help motivate children with disabilities to exercise," explained Peter Armstrong, M.D., medical affairs manager for Shriners Hospitals for Children.
Credit for the idea belongs to FBI Special Agent James Knights, who is also a Shriner. Knights, of Pittsburgh, Pa., desired to create a way to help kiddies with disabilities know that when they worked hard and kept as possible as strong and healthy, their future could include a job in the FBI.
To learn more on Shriners' system of 22 hospitals that provide health care bills and services to kids with orthopaedic issues, burns up, back injuries, and cleft lip and palate at free, produce to Shriners International Headquarters, 2900 Rocky Point Dr., Tampa, FL 33607 or visit www.shrinershq.org. All services are supplied at no charge to kiddies under 18, irrespective of economic need or relation to a url Shriner.