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| #Post#: 4876-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Transportation--one way for some MS organization to be useful | |
| By: agate Date: July 23, 2025, 1:48 am | |
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| The MS organizations that I know of--the MS Society, the MS | |
| Association of America, and the MS Foundation--have various ways | |
| of offering practical assistance to people with MS, and that aid | |
| has been very helpful to many over the years. | |
| However, the only time when I've noticed transportation | |
| assistance being offered was through a program that will provide | |
| transportation (via Uber or Lyft if I recall correctly) to | |
| neurological appointments and for MRIs. | |
| I'm not sure that that program still exists. I hope it does. | |
| I've had MS for so many years that I'm now having aging problems | |
| in addition to the MS. I've been riding on the local paratransit | |
| (lift-equipped) system for almost all of my transportation for | |
| most of those years. I've used such a system in two different | |
| cities. | |
| Unless such systems adopt a policy of providing special | |
| consideration to riders over a certain age (80? 75?), I can | |
| think of no way to solve the problems with transportation that I | |
| now have. | |
| With fading vision and impaired hearing, I am unlikely to be | |
| alert enough to pick up on signals that I need during these | |
| trips--hearing my name called, noticing that a van has parked in | |
| the wrong spot, for instance. | |
| The answer might be to bring a companion along but that is | |
| asking a great deal of someone. A neighbor of mine was having to | |
| go for cancer treatments (infusions) and put up a sign offering | |
| to provide a sandwich to any neighbor who would take her there | |
| and back on a certain day from 8 to 3. I have the impression | |
| that there were no replies to her notice. | |
| My point is that most people just don't have the time or | |
| inclination to want to escort someone with a wheelchair back and | |
| forth to medical appointments. | |
| I average about 1.5 -2 of these a month. If there is no problem | |
| (sudden need for an X ray or extra lab work, a doctor's running | |
| behind schedule), each appointment typically takes about 2 hours | |
| including transportation time. | |
| With the paratransit system, though, I can often be given a | |
| pickup time that is 2 hours before my scheduled appointment | |
| time, and a return trip ride that turns out to last 1-2 hours as | |
| well. The appointment itself might take only 45 minutes and | |
| might be only 15 minutes away. | |
| The rides are done this way so that the driver can pick up and | |
| drop off other riders en route. Sometimes a ride is a straight | |
| shot--my idea of heaven. But all too often there are many other | |
| pickups and dropoffs. | |
| This is not easy for an older person with MS (and diabetes). | |
| Medicines and meals have to happen at fairly regular times. I | |
| become tired after so much riding around, particularly since I | |
| often have to get up earlier than usual in the morning just to | |
| be ready for such an early ride. | |
| Then there is the need for a bathroom. Sometimes I have very | |
| nearly had an accident while riding around. Prominently | |
| displayed in every paratransit van is a box labelled "Body Fluid | |
| Cleanup Kit" or some such, and I'm assuming that the drivers are | |
| trained to cope with accidents. I understand that they can't be | |
| expected to stop the van, find a restroom, unload me in my | |
| wheelchair and wait. And of course it would be uncomfortable | |
| and embarrassing for me. | |
| Here is where an MS organization could be helpful. | |
| Years ago I had to appear in small claims court in connection | |
| with a landlord who refused to return my security deposit. I had | |
| to appear there three times and it was becoming tiring. For the | |
| third time I somehow managed to be fortunate enough to have a | |
| volunteer accompanying me. I no longer recall how I managed to | |
| find such a person but she was a college student, young and | |
| able-bodied, and she was very helpful. She stayed with me during | |
| the entire long wait for the case to be heard and she provided | |
| transportation both ways. | |
| If this could be done, I wonder why an MS organization couldn't | |
| provide such people for those with MS who have no such person to | |
| call on for rides to medical and dental appointments. It is | |
| probably too costly and hard to administer but there are people | |
| out there who lack resources and must rely on a paratransit | |
| system even though rides are so difficult for them that they | |
| skip going to medical appointments unless they are absolutely | |
| essential. | |
| Physical therapy might be helpful for me at this point, for | |
| instance. Many years ago I had several courses of it (8 visits | |
| at a time, covered by Medicare) but wouldn't consider asking the | |
| doctor for a prescription for it now because the trips back and | |
| forth would be too difficult. | |
| Cataract surgery has been recommended for me for many years but | |
| the 14 trips back and forth that would be involved are more than | |
| I want to put up with. | |
| Those are just a couple of examples. | |
| I think of the man with very disabling MS who lived across from | |
| me in an apartment building for many years. He had about seven | |
| siblings all living in the area but they were hardly ever on | |
| hand to help him. He had a helper on weekdays who was provided | |
| by Medicaid. Otherwise he went everywhere in his power chair. | |
| He didn't go to very many medical appointments. How could he? He | |
| had no voice whatsoever, no use of his legs at all, and very | |
| limited use of both arms. He lived alone in his apartment and | |
| managed as best he could. | |
| Sometimes during the holiday season someone from the local | |
| chapter of the MS Society would visit him with a basket of | |
| fruit. That was a lovely gesture but I have a feeling he would | |
| have appreciated help with transportation. | |
| Over the years I have heard complaints to the effect that the MS | |
| organizations--the MS Society especially--focuses too much on | |
| research and not enough on patient services. MS patients are | |
| living far longer than they used to. Maybe these organizations | |
| should consider expanding their patient services to provide | |
| better assistance for the aging MS population. | |
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