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Doing Wheelies!

Finding a great therapeutic bike for a child with special needs.

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Universal Access Resources
Dragonfly: Specials Needs and Universal Access Resource
Universal Access Educational Video Games and Software.
Dragonfly USA

Eye Drop Guide

Note: Review only, product no longer for sale.

It is easily attached to any eye drop bottle.

For the elderly or those with limited hand/eye coordination, and/or with arthritic hands, this soft, pliable vinyl eye drop guide holds an eye drop bottle steady when applying medication to the eye. The guide is shaped to fit the contours of the face around the eye, so that the dropper bottle is held steady while medication is dispensed. It also prevents blinking while applying eye drops. It is easily attached to any eye drop bottle. An attached cap closes the bottle when not in use. Guide is reusable after cleaning.

T1505


Eye Drop Guide

Typical Access Profile

Auditory

Normal
Low
Extremely Low
Not Using Hearing
Hyper-Acute

Vision

Normal
Low
Extremely Low
Not Using Vision

Gross Motor

All
Some
Few
Not Using Gross Motor

Fine Motor

All
Some
Few
Not Using Fine Motor

Developmental Age Range

0 - 2
3 - 5
6 - 8
9 - 12
13 and Over

Language

Typical
Some Spoken
Receptive Only
Sign
Assistive/Augmentitive
Not Using Language
Welcome

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Play Tip PLAY Tip

Interpreting Facial Emotions

Many children (especially those with autism-like conditions) have difficulty interpreting facial expressions and understanding why people feel certain emotions. Moody Bear Puzzle, Emotion Cards, Smart Alex software all offers an opportunity to recognize expressions and hopefully talk about why the person might be happy or frightened. Try using them with a mirror and perhaps Polaroids of familiar people showing the same emotions. Eventually see if your child can make (and understand) the expressions, then take their pictures!

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