Didronel (Etidronate)

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"Generic Didronel"
200mg10-21 days/freeevery country
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"Generic Didronel"
200mg10 days/freemost countries
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"Didronel"
200 mg14-21days/$10
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"Didronel"
200 mg14-21 days/$15
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Didronel (Etidronate)
USE OF EQUIPMENT BY PEOPLE WITH SPINAL CORD INJURY
The need for a wheelchair to get around is often a source of psychological and social distress for the new user. Many people associate wheelchairs with illness, frailty, old age, or total dependence on others. They may feel embarrassed or humiliated by the wheelchair. They may feel trapped in the chair, or see it as a symbol of giving up, or feel that it makes them a “hopeless case.” Braces or crutches may inspire similar feelings of embarrassment, hopelessness, or frustration.
It’s important to talk about these feelings with your therapists and doctors and with other patients, especially if you’re depressed or reluctant to learn how to get around by yourself. If you find that trying to walk (or just fantasizing about it) has become an obsession and is requiring inordinate amounts of physical or mental energy with little useful result, the time may have come to examine some of your assumptions, expectations, and negative feelings about wheelchair use. On the other hand, wanting to have your wheelchair pushed everywhere by someone else, resisting the exercises necessary to increase your strength for independent wheelchair mobility, or frequently asking to be waited on suggest the need for help uncovering and working through your emotions.
Many rehabilitation programs provide recreational therapy, in addition to physical and occupational therapies. Recreational therapy is geared toward helping you take part in recreational, leisure, and daily living activities. These activities might include going to a sports event, learning to paint or do crafts, shopping, or going to a restaurant or other public place. Recreational therapists may also teach patients how to participate in sports (such as swimming or wheelchair basketball) or pursue hobbies with adaptive equipment.
In many hospitals, recreational therapists provide opportunities for patients to practice their mobility skills in the community before going home, through trips to malls, restaurants, ball games, movie theaters, and so on. These trips provide opportunities to use adapted transportation (such as a specially equipped bus, van, or car) and to use a wheelchair in varied environments (flat surfaces, curbs, elevators, special seating areas, restrooms). Such excursions provide first-hand experience of the obstacles wheelchair users will regularly need to face, as well as the rewards of getting around to do what one wants to do. They also provide exposure to further feelings and reactions associated with disability and “coming out” in a wheelchair.
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