Resources
MDA
ALS Division
Muscular Dystrophy Association
3300 E. Sunrise Drive
Tucson, AZ 85718
(800) 572-1717
www.als-mda.org
See www.als-mda.org/clinics/alsserv.html
for a list of MDA/ALS centers.
PERIODICALS
The MDA/ALS Newsmagazine
Published monthly by MDA,
this newsmagazine features timely and authoritative
articles on ALS research, and information about
living with the disease for people with ALS and
their caregivers. This publication is free to
all those registered with MDA. Call your local
MDA office to register. Back issues are also available.
Quest
Published six times a
year, this national magazine features articles,
helpful information and product advertisements
dealing with many aspects of living with neuromuscular
diseases, including ALS. Free to those registered
with MDA. Back issues available.
VIDEOS
Breathe Easy: A Respiratory
Guide for People Living With Neuromuscular Diseases
This medical education
video explores options for assisted breathing
devices and techniques.
Breath of Life
This version of "Breathe
Easy" is geared for use by physicians and
other medical professionals.
Support Groups: The
MDA Support Group and You
Co-chairpersons of the
ALS Division of MDA Steven and Jennifer Bishop
speak to families who’ve just received a diagnosis
of neuromuscular disease but haven’t yet attended
a support group meeting.
Support Groups: Your
MDA/ALS Support Group: Getting Started
In this video the Bishops
provide information intended for use at a new
support group’s inaugural meeting.
Support Groups: ALS:
Maintaining a Positive Perspective
The Bishops address existing
ALS support groups in this video.
BOOKLETS
ALS: Meals for Easy
Swallowing
This is a 125-page books
of recipes and suggestions on preparing easy-to-swallow
food.
Facts About Amyotrophic
Lateral Sclerosis
This newly revised MDA
booklet describes the disease’s symptoms, causes
and treatments.
Los Hechos Sobre la
Esclerosis Lateral Amiotrófica (ALS)
This is the Spanish version
of "Facts About ALS."
101 Hints to "Help-With-Ease"
for Patients With Neuromuscular Disease
This booklet by an MDA
clinic director and an occupational therapist
describes simple low-tech solutions for helping
people with neuromuscular diseases in tasks of
daily living, such as dressing, sleeping, grooming
and eating.
These MDA publications
and videos are available through local MDA offices,
or can be ordered at www.mda.org/publications/puborder.aspx or by calling (800) 572-1717 and asking for the
Publications Department.
CHAT
ROOMS
ALS Conference Series
MDAchat regularly schedules
a series of online conferences led by leading
ALS researchers and clinicians. Check at www.mda.org/chat/calendar.html for the schedule for these conferences and the
following chats.
Living With ALS
In this chat, people with
ALS and caregivers share information about life
with ALS and making it better.
PALS With Children
This chat is for parents
affected by ALS.
To find out about other
MDA chats that may be of interest to those with
ALS, go to www.mda.org/chat/calendar.html.
RESOURCES
ABOUT ALS
BOOKS
ALS — A Guide for Patients,
by D. Eric Livingston, M.D., 16 pages. Available
online at home.earthlink.net/~jakesan/pages/guide1.html.
The late Dr. Livingston,
who had ALS, drew up this helpful guide, which
covers many topics, including practical tips,
positive attitude and end-of-life issues.
ALS – Lou Gehrig’s
Disease, by Mary Dodson Wade, 128 pages, 2001,
$20.95. Enslow Publishers, www.enslow.com,
(800) 398-2504.
Part of the publisher’s
Diseases and People series, this book is written
for grades 6 and up but is appropriate for a general
audience and would be especially helpful in explaining
the disease to children, family members and friends.
Amyotrophic Lateral
Sclerosis: A Guide for Patients and Families,
2nd ed., by Hiroshi Mitsumoto, M.D., and Theodore
L. Munsat, M.D., 470 pages, 2001, $39.95. Demos
Publications, (800) 532-8663, www.demosmedpub.com/book111.html.
This superb book covers
all aspects of ALS treatment. Mitsumoto directs
the Eleanor and Lou Gehrig MDA/ALS Center at Columbia
Presbyterian Medical Center in New York.
ORGANIZATIONS
AND WEB SITES
The ALS Digest
www.alslinks.com/currentdigest.htm
e-mail: mda@mdausa.org
A good source for news
about ALS, and a place to ask questions.
ALS March of Faces
– Moe’s ALS Kids’ page
www.march-of-faces.org/KIDS/moe7.html
This site offers a good
explanation of ALS for children, including animated
links to a biography of Lou Gehrig, Neuroscience
for Kids and NASA.
ALS Resource Page
www.alslinks.com
This site offers links
to many sources of ALS information, the "Internet
Portal for the ALS Community." The site includes
issues of the ALS Digest.
ALS Survival Guide
www.lougehrigsdisease.net
Douglas Edwin Eshleman,
who had ALS, and his survivors offer ideas from
and connections to many sources of ALS information.
America Online Subscribers’
ALS Bulletin Board
Keyword "dis" or "disabilities"
Select "General Discussions"
Select "List Topics"
Select "ALS Lou Gehrig" as Disease
American Academy of
Neurology Practice Parameters
www.aan.com/professionals/practice/pdfs/g10058.pdf
This set of guidelines,
developed by top ALS experts, addresses some of
the major management issues and highlights areas
in which more research is needed.
The Baylor College
of Medicine
The Ronny and Linda Finger MDA/ALS
Center
Department of Neurology
6501 Fannin St., NB302
Houston, TX 77030
www.bcm.tmc.edu/neurol/struct/als/als1.html
National
Organization for Rare Disorders (NORD)
P.O. Box 8923
New Fairfield, CT 06812-8923
(800) 999-6673
www.rarediseases.org
NORD helps needy individuals
obtain necessary prescription drugs through the
medication assistance programs it administers
in conjunction with pharmaceutical companies.
RESOURCES
FOR CAREGIVERS
BOOKS
Always on Call,
edited by Carol Levine, 213 pages, 2000, $20.
United Hospital Fund, (888) 291-4161, www.uhfnyc.org.
This collection of personal
essays and professional articles explores the
world of long-term care, especially as it relates
to the adult caregiver of an elderly relative.
Candlelights for the
Family Caregiver’s World: Spiritual Keys for Avoiding
Caregiver Burnout and Promoting Inner Peace,
by Alice Johnson, Ed.D., and John Johnson Jr.,
Ed.D., 374 pages, 2001. Mal-Jonal Productions,
(305) 353-4061, www.maljonal.com.
This book, Christian in
orientation, offers practical and spiritual advice
for caregivers.
Caregivers and Personal
Assistants, by Alfred H. DeGraff, 3rd ed.,
512 pages, 2002, $24.95. Saratoga Access Publications,
(970) 484-5595, www.saratoga-publications.com.
The author advises readers
to approach hiring and keeping personal assistants
the way they’d approach running a small business.
Caring and Competent
Caregivers, by Robert Moroney, Ph.D., et al.,
196 pages, 1998, $18 paperback, $40 hardcover.
University of Georgia Press, (800) 266-5842, www.uga.edu/ugapress.
This book is geared to
help professionals understand the needs of families
and to communicate better with those they serve.
Counting on Kindness:
The Dilemma of Dependency, by Wendy Lustbader,
206 pages, 1991, FreePress, (206) 985-5400, www.lustbader.com.
Lustbader, a medical social
worker, has taken a unique look at caregiving
from the perspective of the person recieving the
care.
The Fearless Caregiver,
edited by Gary Barg, Editor-in-Chief, Today’s
Caregiver magazine, 264 pages, 2001, $11.96 paper,
Capital Books, (800) 758-3756, www.capital-books.com.
Though heavily slanted
toward Alzheimer’s disease, this collection of
articles by Barg and more than 30 other experts,
including doctors, nurses, psychologists, physical
therapists, counselors, clinical social workers,
lawyers, financial planners, spiritual leaders
and experienced caregivers, is like a support
group in a book.
Help Yourself: Problem
Solving for the Disabled, by Douglas R. Bucy,
176 pages, 1996, $14.95. Macmillan.
The late author wrote
about his experience of living with ALS. The book
covers the roles of the primary caregiver and
professional caregivers, and detailed information
about home modifications and daily living aids.
Out of print; check larger libraries.
Helping Yourself Help
Others: A Book for Caregivers, by Rosalynn
Carter with Susan K. Golant, 278 pages, 1996,
$14. Times Books, Three Rivers Press, (800) 733-3000, www.randomhouse.com.
The former first lady
recounts her experiences of helping care for her
father, grandparents and her husband’s family.
The text is filled with helpful suggestions for
individuals and organizations, as well as words
of comfort and support. Chapters cover preparing
yourself, emotional dilemmas, family harmony,
isolation, burnout and dealing with professionals.
Helpmates: Support
in Times of Critical Illness, by Harry A.
Cole, 157 pages, 1991, $12.95. Westminster/John
Knox Press, (800) 227-2872, amazon.com.
Cole is a professor of
history and philosophy who cared for his wife
after she had a stroke. His book focuses on ways
of meeting the emotional and spiritual challenges
facing the caregiving spouse.
Making the Moments
Count: Leisure Activities for Caregiving Relationships,
by Joanne Ardolf Decker, Ph.D., 208 pages, 1997,
$17.95 paperback $53.00 hardcover. Johns Hopkins
University Press, (410) 516-6900, www.press.jhu.edu/press/.
This volume offers a detailed
strategy for building leisure into the caregiving
experience for individuals of different ages and
abilities.
Nursing Procedures,
3rd ed., by Kathy Goldberg, editor, 832 pages,
2000, $49.95. Springhouse Corp., (800) 638-3030, www.lww.com/nursing/.
This book contains how-to
instructions and illustrations on safety, transfer,
hygiene, nutrition and other issues.
The
Resourceful Caregiver: Helping Family Caregivers
Help Themselves, by the National Family Caregivers
Association, 168 pages, 1996, $24.95. Mosby Lifeline,
(800) 545-2522, www.us.elsevierhealth.com.
This exhaustive listing
of every kind of resource needed to face the challenges
of caregiving emphasizes the importance of getting
help and caring for yourself. The book is an indispensable
aid to the family or professional caregiver.
Share the Care: How
to Organize a Group to Care for Someone Who Is
Seriously Ill, by Cappy Capossela and Sheila
Warnock, 287 pages, 1995, $14. Simon & Schuster, www.simonsays.com.
This book offers a unique
group approach to turning a circle of ordinary
people into a powerful caregiver team.
ORGANIZATIONS
AND WEB SITES
Access to Respite Care
and Help (ARCH) National Resource Center
Chapel Hill Training-Outreach Project
800 Eastowne Drive, Suite 105
Chapel Hill, NC 27514
(919) 490-5577
www.chtop.com
ARCH offers information
on respite programs across the country. You can
call for information, or search the database at
the Web site.
American Association
of Retired Persons
(800) 424-3410
www.aarp.org
Under the main topic of
"Health and Wellness," try "caregiving"
in the index or search for topics such as assistive
devices, caregiving support, financial matters
and care options. AARP services are geared toward
anyone age 50 or older, and information may be
of use to all.
Caregiver Network Inc.
561 Avenue Road, Suite 206
Toronto, ON M4V 2J8
CANADA
(416) 323-1090
e-mail: karenh@caregiver.on.ca
www.caregiver.on.ca
This Canadian organization
is an information source to make your life as
a caregiver easier.
CareGivers.com
17 Applegate Court
Madison, WI 53713
(608) 256-0488
email: suppport@betteraging.com
www.caregivers.com
This is part of the AgeNet
Eldercare Network.
Caregiving.com
P.O. Box 224
Park Ridge IL 60068
(773) 334-5794
www.caregiving.com
From The Center for Family
Caregivers, the site provides links and solutions
and publishes the Caregiving Newsletter.
FamilyCareAmerica
www.familycareamerica.com
Working with corporate
and community partners and employers, FCA helps
family caregivers help themselves and the ones
they love, and is designed to identify resources
in your community automatically.
Family
Caregiver Alliance
690 Market St., Suite 600
San Francisco, CA 94104
(415) 434-3388
email:info@caregiver.org
www.caregiver.org
This organization focuses
on caregiving for people with brain and neurological
problems. Fact sheets and newsletter cover caregiving
tips, juggling work and family, and other relevant
topics. The FCA is a nationally recognized information
center on long-term care.
National Association
for Home Care
228 Seventh St. SE
Washington, DC 20003
(202) 547-7424
www.nahc.org
This is a professional
association for caregivers and caregiver organizations.
The Internet site contains the Home Care and Hospice
Locator, and information on how to choose a home
health-care agency.
National Family Caregivers
Association
10400 Connecticut Ave., Suite 500
Kensington, MD 20895-3944
(800) 896-3650
Fax: (301) 942-2302
email: info@nfcares.org
www.nfcacares.org
NFCA has extensive information
on caregiving topics and member organizations.
It publishes the Take Care Newsletter and other
materials, and is a grassroots organization focusing
on public policy issues related to caregiving.
Visiting
Nurses Associations of America
99 Summer St., Suite 1700
Boston, MA 02110
(617) 737-3200
Fax: (617) 737-1144
www.vnaa.org
Visiting Nurse agencies
care for patients denied service because they
don’t meet low-income levels for Medicaid, or
don’t have full coverage for services, or have
exhausted their private insurance benefits. Visiting
Nurse agencies also offer specialized services,
such as adult day care, hospice care, and Meals
on Wheels, and are often the primary community
source for preventative health services.
The Well Spouse Foundation
63 W. Main St., Suite H Freehold,
NJ 07728
(800) 838-0879
email: info@wellspouse.org
www.wellspouse.org
Well Spouse is a national
membership organization which gives support to
wives, husbands and partners of the chronically
ill and/or disabled.
MAGAZINES
AND NEWSLETTERS
Caregiving Newsletter
The Center for Family Caregivers
Tad Publishing Co.
P.O. Box 224
Park Ridge IL 60068
(773) 334-5794
www.caregiving.com
FamilyCareAmerica Newsletter
email: newsletter@familycareamerica.com
www.familycareamerica.com
An e-mail newsletter from
FamilyCareAmerica, a media, publishing and products
marketing company focused on the needs of caregivers
in America. Helps assess, plan, manage, and monitor
care, while recommending products.
Take Care Newsletter
National Family Caregivers Association
10400 Connecticut Avenue, #500
Kensington, MD 20895-3944
www.nfcacares.org
Today’s Caregiver Magazine
6365 Taft St., Suite 3003
Hollywood, FL 33024
(800) 829-2734
email: info@caregiver.com
www.caregiver.com
Helps caregivers work
with health-care professionals, plan for long-term
care and deal with specific problems. Also publishes
the Caregiver.com Weekly Newsletter at newsletters@caregiver.com.
BOOKS
BY AND ABOUT PEOPLE WITH ALS
Bigger Than the Sky
— The True Love Story of Emilie and Her Grandfather,
by Helene E.D. Nichols, 130 pages, 2003. Xlibris,
(888) 795-4274, www.Xlibris.com.
An account of the bond
between Emilie and her grandfather who is affected
by ALS.
Falcon’s Cry: A Desert
Storm Memoir, by Major Michael Donnelly with
Denise Donnelly, 251 pages, 1998, $29.95. Praeger
Publishers, www.greenwood.com (203) 226-3571.
This biography traces
Donnelly’s experience as a career Air Force officer
who developed ALS after serving in the Gulf War.
How Will They Know
If I’m Dead? Transcending Disability and Terminal
Illness, by Robert C. Horn III, with preface
by C. Everett Koop, M.D., 120 pages, 1996, $25.95.
GR Press/St. Lucie Press.
A former political science
professor and an authority on the Soviet Union,
Horn describes his eight-year struggle with ALS,
and how his family coped. The book, which Horn
wrote by operating his computer with his foot,
recounts how he found life with ALS worth living.
I Choose to Live: A
Journey Through Life With ALS, by William
Sinton, 155 pages, 2003. Banbury Publishing, (800)
2247-6553, www.banburypublishing.com.
This autobiography chronicles
the experiences of Sinton, an astrophysicist and
professor of physics and astronomy who has ALS.
In the Garden of Gethsemane,
by Joan Schuster with James A. Costa Jr., 196
pages, 2001, $12 plus $3 for mailing. Order from
Jim Costa, 6 Hidden Valley, Elma, NY 14059, (716)
652-6755.
This honest, often raw,
story of courage introduces a woman who doesn’t
regret what’s lost to ALS but who fully appreciates
what’s left.
Journeys with ALS:
Personal Tales of Courage and Coping with Lou
Gehrig’s Disease, by David Feigenbaum, 290
pages, 1998, $25. DLRC Press, mary@davidlawrence.com.
The author has compiled
30 candid personal accounts of people affected
by ALS.
Learning to Fall: The
Blessings of an Imperfect Life, by Philip
Simmons, 176 pages, 2002, $16.95. Bantam Dell.
This book is a literary
gem about living with ALS, and provides a new
lens through which to look at the significance
of living.
Meaning of a Disability:
The Lived Experience of Paralysis, by Albert
B. Robillard, 191 pages, 1999, $21.95 paper. Temple
University Press, (800) 621-2736, www.temple.edu/tempress.
This author combines autobiography
with sociological research as he focuses on continuing
as "normal" a life as possible with
ALS.
Morrie: In His Own
Words, by Morrie Schwartz, 144 pages, 1999,
$18. Walker & Co., (800) 289-2553, www.walkerbooks.com,
reissue of Letting Go: Morrie’s Reflections
on Living While Dying, published in 1996.
Schwartz’s book presents
his insights on facing terminal illness under
such headings as handling frustration, reaching
acceptance, reviewing the past, being kind to
yourself and developing a spiritual connection.
On Any Given Day,
by Joe Martin and Ross Yockey, 181 pages, 2000,
$21.95. John F. Blair Publisher, (800) 222-9796, www.blairpub.com.
A banker and North Carolina
community leader, Joe Martin tells the story of
his ALS with humor, inspiration and honesty.
Terminally Sane,
by Jay A. Rouelle, 153 pages, 1999, $18. Jarou
Publishing, (802) 223-5347, trouelle@pshift.com.
Some readers will appreciate
Rouelle’s honesty about ALS, while those dealing
with recent diagnoses might find his frankness
overwhelming. His perspective from inside a nursing
home is eye-opening.
Tuesdays With Morrie,
by Mitch Albom, 192 pages, 1997, $11.95 paperback.
Doubleday, www.randomhouse.com/doubleday.
The best-selling biography
of Morrie Schwartz was written by his former student,
Mitch Albom, and is an inspirational chronicle
of his last days.
Walking on Central
Boulevard, by Marion Lippert, 127 pages, 1998,
$19.95. Blue Note Books, (800) 624-0401, www.bluenotebooks.com/nonfict.htm.
A mother’s account of
her daughter’s life with ALS, this is the story
of a family’s search for a cure through both alternative
and conventional medical practice.
When It Rains...,
by Marjorie Spoto. www.whenitrains.com.
This novel is a romantic
drama about how three sisters cope with the death
of their mother from ALS and with their fears
that they, too, will develop the disease.
RESPIRATION,
SPEECH AND SWALLOWING DIFFICULTIES
BOOKS
AND VIDEOS
Breathe Easy: A Respiratory
Guide for People Living With Neuromuscular
Diseases
and Breath of Life, MDA.
See MDA.
Communication and Swallowing
Solutions for the ALS/MND Community: A CINI Manual,
by Marta S. Kazandjian, 89 pages, 1997, $57.95.
Singular Publishing Group, www.delmarhealthcare.com,
(800) 347-7707.
Written by the professionals
at Communication Independence for the Neurologically
Impaired, this manual covers the many options
available to solve communication and swallowing
problems as they arise in ALS and illustrates
how these solutions can be used to support and
resolve patients’ needs.
Guide to the Evaluation
and Management of Neuromuscular Disease, by
John R. Bach, M.D., FAAPMR, FCCP, 1999, $32. Hanley
& Belfus, (800) 545-2522, or try a medical
library.
Bach is a leading researcher
in the management of neuromuscular respiratory
problems and emphasizes the use of noninvasive
techniques. The book addresses all aspects of
caring for a person with a neuromuscular disease
and is written in easily understandable language.
Management of Patients
With Neuromuscular Disease, by John R. Back,
M.D., 2003, $35. Hanley & Belfus, (800) 545-2522,
or try a medical library.
Noninvasive Mechanical
Ventilation, by John R. Back, 2002, Hanley
& Belllfus, (800) 545-2522, or try a medical
library.
Pulmonary Rehabilitation:
The Obstructive and Paralytic Conditions,
edited by John R. Bach, M.D., 1996, $69.95. Hanley
& Belfus, (800) 545-2522, or try a medical
library.
ORGANIZATIONS
AND WEB SITES
American Speech-Language-Hearing
Association (ASHA) Action Center
10801 Rockville Pike
Rockville, MD 20852
(800) 638-8255
www.asha.org
e-mail: actioncenter@asha.org
The information here about
communication and swallowing difficulties includes
Proserv, assistance in finding a speech-language
pathologist in your area.
Communication Independence
for the Neurologically Impaired (CINI)
C/O Kornreich Technology Center
201 I.U. Willets Road
Albertson, NY 10507
(516) 465-1629
www.cini.org
e-mail: cini@cini.org
This nonprofit organization
serves as a resource for patients and professionals
about communication and swallowing problems.
MAGAZINES
AND NEWSLETTERS
IVUN News
International Ventilator Users Network
4207 Lindell Blvd., Suite 110
St. Louis, MO 63108-2915
(314) 534-0475
www.post-polio.org/ivun
A newsletter discussing
issues and new ideas in ventilator use, $17/year.
STS (Speech to Speech)
Phone Assistance
P.O. Box 88
Belleville, WI 53508
www.stsnews.com
STSnews.com is an online
publication for the speech disability community
and the public, too.
TECHNOLOGY
AND COMMUNICATION
BOOKS,
VIDEO AND CD-ROM
Computer and Web Resources
for People With Disabilities: A Guide to Exploring
Today’s Assistive Technology, 3rd ed., by
the Alliance for Technology Access, 366 pages,
2000, $20.95. Hunter House, (800) 266-5592, ordering@hunterhouse.com.
This comprehensive guide
helps in determining your needs and finding the
right equipment. The book is a good first stop
if you’re exploring assistive technology.
"Families, Culture
and Alternative and Augmentative Communication
(AAC)," CD-ROM, 1999, $49.95 plus shipping
and handling. Program Development Associates,
(800) 543-2119, www.pdassoc.com/fca.html.
This award-winning CD-ROM
may prove useful in selecting and using communication
devices. Bilingual and interactive, the format
is compatible with both Macintosh and Windows.
The Road to Funding,
by Prentke Romich Company, 68 pages, 1998, free.
Prentke Romich Company, (800) 262-1984 or download
from www.prentrom.com/funding/funding.html.
Though published by a
major manufacturer of augmentative communications
equipment, this guide doesn’t emphasize products.
It’s a comprehensive guide to funding sources
and how best to approach them, including private
insurance, vocational rehabilitation programs,
Medicaid and Medicare.
Tech Talk, four-part
video series, 1999, $69 each or $229 for set of
four. Program Development Associates, (800) 543-2119, www.pdassoc.com/tts.html.
The series covers telecommunications
equipment, computer access, augmentative communication,
and home and workplace accommodations.
ORGANIZATIONS
AND WEB SITES
Abledata
8630 Fenton St., Suite 930
Silver Spring, MD 20910
(800) 227-0216
www.abledata.com
Abledata is a source of
information on assistive technology sponsored
by the Department of Education. The entire database
is available for searching on the Web site.
Alliance for Technology
Access
2175 E. Francisco Blvd., Suite L
San Rafael, CA 94901
(415) 455-4575
e-mail: ATAinfo@ATAccesss.org
www.ATAccess.org
ATA is a network of community-based
resource centers, developers and vendors, and
others dedicated to providing information and
support services to adults with disabilities,
and increasing their use of standard, assistive
and information technologies.
Brain Actuated Technologies
Inc.
1350 President St. Yellow Springs,
OH 45387-1815
(ww937) 767-2674
e-mail: admin@brainfingers.com
www.brainfingers.com
This company makes alternative
human-computer interfaces.
Center for Assistive
Technology and Environmental Access
Crestwood Communication Aids
6625 N. Sidney Place, Dept. 21F
Milwaukee, WI 53209-3259
(414) 352-5678
e-mail: crestcomm@aol.com
www.communicationaids.com
Ruth Leff, a Milwaukee
speech-language pathologist, founded Crestwood
Communication Aids 23 years ago and has patented
eight communication devices for children and adults.
Easy Access to Software
and Information
P.O. Box 818
Lake Forest CA 92609
(949) 916-2837
e-mail: info@easi.cc
www.easi.cc
EASI provides information
and guidance in the area of access-to-information
technologies for people with disabilities.
National Rehabilitation
Information Center
4200 Forbes Blvd., Suite 202
Lanham, MD 20706
(800) 346-2742
e-mail: naricinfo@heitechservices.com
www.naric.com
This resource touches
on products and home modifications, gives results
of federal research, and lists helpful programs
and newsletters related to living with disabilities.
There’s a charge for some services.
RESNA (Rehabilitation
Engineering Society of North America)
1700 N. Moore St., Suite 1540
Arlington, VA 22209-1903
(703) 524-6686
e-mail: info@resna.org
www.resna.org
This association supports
rehabilitation technology research to benefit
people with disabilities. RESNA’s Technical Assistance
Project assists states’ assistive technology programs,
as provided by federal law.
The Trace Research
& Development Center
University of Wisconsin-Madison
2107 Engineering Centers
1550 Engineering Drive Madison,
WI 53706
(608) 262-6966
e-mail: info@trace.wisc.edu
www.trace.wisc.edu
This university facility
conducts research on technological devices that
can help people with ALS and other disabilities
communicate and use computers.
Major computer and
software manufacturers also have accessible products;
check their Web sites.
MAGAZINES
AND NEWSLETTERS
Closing the Gap
526 Main St. P.O. Box 68
Henderson, MN 56044
(507) 248-3294
e-mail: info@closingthegap.com
www.closingthegap.com
This organization has
a bimonthly newsletter, database and annual conference
on the use of computer technology by and for people
with disabilities.
Communication Outlook
Artificial Language Laboratory
405 Computer Center
Michigan State University
East Lansing, MI 48824-1042
(517) 353-0870
e-mail: artlang@pilot.msu.edu
www.msu.edu/~artlang/CommOut.html
This international quarterly
magazine focuses on developments in the world
of communication aid technology.
MEDICAL
EQUIPMENT AND HOME MODIFICATIONS
MDA
Many local MDA offices have loan closets featuring
used durable medical equipment. They can also
help you locate other local sources and funding
options.
Disability Dealer
jjMarketing
1205 Savoy St., Suite 101
San Diego, CA 92107
(619) 222-8735
www.blvd.com
This online directory
features a broad range of new and used durable
medical equipment for sale.
Department of Housing
and Urban Development
451 7th St. SW, Room 6116
Washington, DC 20410
(202) 708-1112
www.hud.gov/groups/disabilities.aspx
This page links to information
about federal laws and programs providing housing
support for people with disabilities.
Med-Sell
www.medsell.com
This site offers classified
ads for hundreds of items of used medical equipment
in dozens of categories.
National Mobility Equipment
Dealers Association
11211 N. Nebraska Ave., Suite A-5
Tampa, FL 33612
(800) 833-0427
www.nmeda.org
This forum enables consumers
to get help regarding equipment for their needs,
and keeps users informed about the ever-changing
industry.
Quest
www.mda.org/publications/Quest/
Check the articles and
ads in MDA’s bimonthly national magazine for new
information about helpful products and services.
Wheelchair Accessible
Home Clearinghouse
Wheelchair Access Inc.
P.O. Box 12
Glenmoore, PA 19343
(610) 942-3266
e-mail: info@waccess.org
www.waccess.org
Search the classified
ads for current listings of real estate and used
durable medical equipment, vans and accessories.
FINANCIAL,
LEGAL AND MEDICAL RESOURCES
Employment
& Insurance Issues
COBRA
(866) 487-2365
www.dol.gov/dol/topic/health-plans/cobra.htm
The Consolidated Omnibus
Budget Reconciliation Act (COBRA) gives workers
and their families who lose their health benefits
the right to continue group health benefits for
limited periods of time under certain circumstances.
FMLA
(866) 4-USA-DOL
www.dol.gov/dol/topic/benefits-leave/fmla.htm
The Family and Medical
Leave Act (FMLA) provides certain employees with
up to 12 weeks of unpaid, job-protected leave
per year for family and medical reasons. It also
requires that group health benefits be maintained
during the leave.
Internal Revenue Service
(IRS)
(800) 829-1040
www.irs.gov/
Check with the IRS for
copies of Publications 503 and 524, which may
offer tax credits if you have a dependent with
a disability. You can order free tax forms by
calling (800) TAX FORM.
End-of-Life
Issues
Fact Sheet on Durable
Powers of Attorney
www.caregiver.org/factsheets/attorney_powers.html
This fact sheet from the Family Caregiver Alliance answers
many of the questions you may have about durable
powers of attorney and living trusts.
Hospice Foundation
of America
(800) 854-3402
www.hospicefoundation.org
This organization assists
those coping either personally or professionally
with terminal illness, death, and the process
of grief, through publications, conferences and
information on choosing a hospice.
National Hospice and
Palliative Care Organization
1700 Diagonal Road, Suite 625
Alexandria, VA 22314
(703) 837-1500
e-mail: info@nhpco.org
www.nhpco.org
This is a nonprofit organization
of hospices, professionals and volunteers. The
Web site has database of hospices by state.
Partnership for Caring:
America’s Voices for the Dying
1620 Eye St. NW, Suite 202
Washington, DC 20006
(202) 296-8071
(800) 989-9455
e-mail: pfc@partnershipforcaring.org
www.partnershipforcaring.org
This organization operates
a national crisis and information hotline dealing
with end-of-life issues and provides state-specific
living wills and medical powers of attorney.
Legal
Resources
Disability Rights Advocates
449 15th St., Suite 303
Oakland, CA 94612-2821
(510) 451-8644
e-mail: general@dralegal.org
www.dralegal.org/about
DRA advocates on behalf
of people with all types of disabilities, and
publishes a periodic statistical report, Disability
Watch, analyzing barriers and emerging issues.
Fact Sheet on Finding
an Attorney
www.caregiver.org/factsheets/finding_attorney.html
The Family
Caregiver Alliance Clearinghouse offers help
in finding a knowledgeable, competent attorney.
National Academy of
Elder Law Attorneys
1604 N. Country Club Road
Tucson, AZ 85716
(520) 881-4005
www.naela.org
This organization can
provide information on living wills and durable
powers of attorney, among other legal issues.
National Association
of Protection and Advocacy Systems
900 2nd St. NE, Suite 211
Washington, DC 20002
(202) 408-9514
e-mail: napas@vipmail.earthlink.net
This organization can
connect you with the nearest disability rights
P&A system and client assistant program (CAP),
as mandated by federal law. These agencies advocate
for and represent people with disabilities in
issues involving their legal rights.
Medicare/Medicaid
Centers for Medicare
and Medicaid Services (CMS)
7500 Security Boulevard
Baltimore, MD 21244
(877) 267-2323
www.cms.hhs.gov
(800) MEDICARE
www.medicare.org
Social Security Office
Social Security Administrator
Office of Public Inquiries
Windsor Park Building
6401 Security Blvd.
Baltimore, MD 21235
(800) 772-1213
www.ssa.gov/disability
MDA/ALS
Centers
All of MDA’s 230 hospital-affiliated
clinics provide a full array of diagnostic and
follow-up services to people with ALS. To find
the clinic nearest you, check your local phone
book, call MDA at (800) 572-1717 or go to www.mda.org/clinics/ and type in your zip code.
In 2003, MDA’s ALS Division
was managing 30 designated MDA/ALS research and
clinical centers with a specific focus on ALS.
Visit www.als-mda.org/clinics/alsserv.html for an up-to-date listing of these centers.
To order copies of When
a Loved One Has ALS, or other MDA materials
pertaining to ALS, please link to www.mda.org/publications/puborder.aspx.
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