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Welcome to Disability News, a roundup of stories that appear on Yahoo! and that feature people and topics of interest to the community of individuals with disability.

Disability News: Be a good sport

Sunday, February 19th, 2012

Paralympic skier does backflip on sit ski

Josh Dueck, a member of the Canadian Para-alpine ski team, this month became the first athlete to complete a backflip on a sit ski. “In the powder, I’m just floating around,” he said. “It feels like I’ve got no weight in the world. I’m just literally skipping off a cloud. The sensation I got when I was flipping, it really brought me back to a life without barriers.” Dueck, who was paralyzed after a skiing fall in 2004, started the backflip project about three years ago, practicing first by flipping into foam pits at an indoor training facility in Copper Mountain, Colo., then moved to the slopes, landing on an airbag. His next goal? “I think something that would be pretty cool to start looking towards is big mountain skiing,” he said.

Tyler Summitt battling alongside his legendary mom

This great story comes from Yahoo! Sports, where columnist Pat Forde relates his experience as the son of an early-onset Alzheimer’s patient to the situation in front of Tyler Summitt, son of legendary Tennessee basketball coach Pat Summitt. “It took 18 years for Alzheimer’s to finish cruelly killing my mom,” Forde writes. “She was remarkably healthy physically, so her body kept going long after her mind had been robbed of almost everything. … Alzheimer’s is undefeated. Nobody beats it.” He finds inspiration in Tyler, who knew something was wrong with his mother when “maybe she could only do four things instead of seven. She just wasn’t ‘Wonder Woman’ for a while. We just knew something was amiss.” Although just a college sophomore, Tyler has an impressive outlook: “I don’t focus on what I can’t control,” he said. “We can control the memories we still make together. I’d rather focus on the new memories and the life at hand than worry about losing the past.”

Pat Summitt of Tennessee celebrates with her son Tyler in 1996. (Getty Images)

Pat Summitt of Tennessee celebrates with her son Tyler in 1996. (Getty Images)

Paralyzed woman to walk London Marathon

Doctors told Claire Lomas she would never walk again after a 2007 horse-riding accident. On April 22, Lomas will attempt to walk 26.2 miles with the help of a special robotic suit. “The technology comprises a number of motors and gears strapped to the user’s lower body, while sensors attached to the upper body help to control the motion,” Digital Trends reports. “A computer, together with a rechargeable battery power source, is located in a backpack. Once mastered, a user can even use [the suit] to climb stairs.” “It is physically hard work and incredibly frustrating at times to get the technique right, but when I make progress, it gives me a fantastic feeling,” Lomas said.

Every corner is blind for devoted French Formula One fan

Charaf-Eddine Ait Taleb travels on low-cost airlines and public transportation to Formula One races, usually taking a tent to camp within easy distance of the paddock. “I go to the corner where you need to brake because I love to hear the gearbox, pum, pum, pum. When you are near it is fantastic, you feel it in your body,” he says. Ait Taleb, 29, lost his vision a decade ago, and the Frenchman has been embraced by the Formula One community, with teams and drivers helping him gain access to the paddock and garages and giving him the inside track, Reuters reports.

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Disability News: Rolling down the pitch

Sunday, February 5th, 2012

It’s Pakistan vs. England in first disabled cricket series

Organizers of a cricket series between teams of disabled people hope to ignite a big future for the less conventional version of the game. Amiruddin Ansari, secretary of the Pakistan Disabled Cricket Association and himself a former first class cricketer, says he hopes the matches between England and Pakistan will be a “a landmark series and will be well received in the world, sending the message that no disability can stop human beings from shining.” Ansari’s goal for the movement is far from modest: “We want to stage a World Cup for disabled cricketers.” Pakistan is led by Salim Karim, whose right leg withered from polio and whose left leg was damaged in an accident, AFP reports.

Cricketers in wheelchairs

Disabled Pakistani cricketers celebrate during a match in Karachi last year. (AFP photo)

‘Reality’ show: 2 men, a wheelchair, friendship

Sharon Cohen of the Associated Press wrote this great story about Mike Berkson, “a sharp-witted, movie-obsessed 22-year-old college student” who has cerebral palsy, and Tim Wambach, his aide, who brought their relationship to the stage in a 80-minute show. “They’ve dubbed themselves two men and a wheelchair, but their show is really about the journey of a disabled kid with enormous smarts who grows up — and the friend who has helped him navigate along the way,” Cohen writes. “Berkson compares himself to a blind person whose other senses become sharper. ‘My mental state is not better or stronger, but it just fires a little quicker or goes a little faster than the average person,’ he says. Or as he tells the audience: ‘My body is in a wheelchair, my mind is not.’”

Prison dilemma: Surging numbers of older inmates

In corrections systems nationwide, officials are grappling with decisions about geriatric units, hospices and medical parole as elderly inmates — with their high rates of illness and infirmity — make up an ever increasing share of the prison population, the Associated Press reports. “U.S. corrections officials now operate old age homes behind bars,” says Jamie Fellner, a Human Rights Watch special adviser. One corrections department director said officials confront such questions as whether to retrofit some cells with grab bars and handicap toilets, how to accommodate inmates’ wheelchairs, and how to deal with inmates who no longer understand instructions.

Elderly inmate

A nursing assistant helps an elderly inmate to his cell at the California Medical Facility in Vacaville, Calif. (2008 AP photo/Rich Pedroncelli)

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Disability News: Happy birthday, Mr. Hawking

Sunday, January 22nd, 2012

Disability News, a biweekly roundup of the best disability-related stories on Yahoo! News, is back from its holiday hiatus. I hope 2012 is off to a good start for everyone!

How has Stephen Hawking lived to 70 with ALS?

Stephen Hawking

Stephen Hawking (Getty photo)

Although he was too ill to make it to his birthday party, Stephen Hawking turned 70 this month in grand style, receiving a special present from London’s Science Museum: an exhibition that draws “on artifacts from Hawking’s study, letters from his archives, and pictures from his family collection to paint a more intimate portrait of the world’s best-known living theoretical physicist.” But, as Scientific American reports, for someone who had a form of the motor-neuron disease amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) diagnosed decades ago, the milestone birthday is a gift in itself. Leo McCluskey, an associate professor of neurology and medical director of the ALS Center at the University of Pennsylvania, says: “On average people live two to three years after diagnosis. But that means that half the people live longer, and there are people who live for a long, long time. … What’s happened to him is just astounding. He’s certainly an outlier.” (Related: Intel is exploring ways to reverse the slowing of Hawkins’s speech.)

‘Personal mobility’ highlighted at major car show

At its exhibition in Detroit this month, the North American International Auto Show debuted a new area focused on transportation for people with disabilities, the Associated Press reports. “It wasn’t that long ago when being disabled meant the end of personal mobility. Those days are gone,” said NAIAS chairman Bill Perkins.

Military amputees inspire through softball

Wounded Warrior Amputee Softball Team member Joshua Wege, left, assists teammate Daniel Lasko as he uses a wrench to repair his prosthetic leg before an exhibition game. Click for more photos. (AP Photo/Brian Blanco)

Wounded Warriors (AP)

Imagine a softball team. Now imagine this: “All of the infielders are missing at least one of their legs. Two of the outfielders use those special carbon-fiber running legs, the ones that look like upside-down question marks, for speed. One outfielder is missing a hand, and the right-fielder plays without his entire left arm and shoulder.” The Associated Press profiles the Wounded Warriors, a softball team made up of Army and Marine combat veterans, most of whom rely on prosthetic limbs. Click the photo at right to see more images.

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Disability News: Bullying at the North Pole

Sunday, December 25th, 2011

The next installment of Yahoo’s bi-monthly Disability News roundup will be published Jan. 22. Happy holidays to all!

Was Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer bullied?

George Giuliani, a special ed professor at Long Island University in New York, has some issues with a classic Christmas cartoon. “The whole community of the North Pole is into exclusion, not inclusion,” says Giuliani of “Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer,” a 1964 television special that finds its way back onto the airwaves each December. “The message to disabled children is we will not accept you as you are, but only if you can do something extraordinary,” he said. If your family is watching Charlie Brown, the Grinch, or, yes, Rudolph this season, here’s some advice from Herbert Nieburg, a Connecticut psychologist and bullying expert: “Parents should have a conversation with their kids … the main one being about difference. How do we work with people who are different? It’s not just having a red nose, it’s being gay, smart, athletic. Parents should talk constantly with kids about how we treat other people.”

Santa and Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer

Santa Claus and Rudolph puppets from the TV special "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer." (AP photo/Paul Vernon)

Broadway strikes an autism-friendly chord

A unique performance of Broadway musical “The Lion King,” based on the Disney film by the same name, incorporated production changes aimed at making the theater-going experience more accessible for people on the autism spectrum. Adjustments to the show included “bringing down the sound of a steam blast, lowering the music at points, and eliminating strobe lights,” said Lisa Carling, director of the Theatre Development Fund’s Accessibility Programs. The sensory sensitivities some autistic people have can turn large crowds, bright lights and loud sounds into big stressors, making theater attendance difficult. The Associated Press reports: “According to organizers, the performance in the 1,600-seat theater had quickly sold out (with another 1,000 families on a waiting list for tickets), pointing to a real need for accessible theater for the autism-spectrum community.” TDF plans to mount another autism-friendly show in 2012.

A performance of "The Lion King."

A production of "The Lion King" in Las Vegas. (AP photo/Darrin Bush).

The touchscreen that lets you feel textures

The Week reports on the next frontier in touchscreens: “Touchscreens that feel nubbly or even fur-like? That’s the surreal promise behind new technology from Tokyo firm Senseg, which allows users to feel textures captured in an image on a tablet’s display screen — photos of pebbles, sandpaper, or packing material will feel like the real thing.” Potential uses include virtual keyboards with discernible key edges, Braille tablets, and touch-based video games.

Deafness shaped Beethoven’s music

According to scientists, progressive deafness profoundly influenced Beethoven’s compositions, prompting him to choose lower-frequency notes as his condition worsened, AFP reports. What’s really interesting is that once he was totally deaf, the higher notes returned. “When he came to rely completely on his inner ear, he was no longer compelled to produce music he could actually hear when performed, and slowly returned to his inner musical world and early composing experiences,” says the research paper. Check out a video about the project below:

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