| Achievement and goals | “Well, I feel it’s important to overcome. Because without her wheelchair, she wouldn’t be able to go out and do anything, so everything would be a challenge and a difficulty.”~“I’m really into photography…I used to go on loads of walks and take loads of photo. Now we can go on walks in the wheelchair and it means I can still go on walks and take photos.”~“…And you’re going to be doing your Duke of Edinburgh so your wheelchair is going to come in very useful for that, for things like the expedition.” |
| Activities and fun | “With my wheelchair I am give [sic] an outside life in school holidays to enjoy the sunshine when we have some. As I can’t walk far as my legs hurt or I collapse.”~“I took him to Disneyland Paris…[he] had a wheelchair seat and he was able to stay in the buggy on the Eurostar. Without the buggy, he’d have never managed to go there at all. It would never have been possible.”~“The chair just enables her to not be stopped from doing things.” |
| Communication | “P: It’s helped you do more face-to-face things, hasn’t it?C: Yeah, it has.P: Before, she could only communicate online. But you could communicate, with the wheelchair, face-to-face.”~“We’d only been here two or three days and he went outside in his electric wheelchair, he went down to the bottom, there, and started talking to the neighbour next-door, went over right to the fence … So it’s great because he can just go and do those things.” |
| Education | “I definitely wanted to go to college in a wheelchair…And I wanted as much independence as I possibly could get out from it.”~“I find it hard to walk long distances. So I tend to use it at school…Because it’s a two-site school and after lessons, I have to walk a lot through the day, and it gets more painful. So I tend to use it for that.” |
| Energy and fatigue | “She knows that she can just go in the wheelchair and it’s not going to cause this horrible fatigue. You could just see the weariness on her face, that: ‘It’s too much for me and I can’t do it.’ We don’t get half of that now. It’s just, it’s so much better.”~“He self-propels himself and he’s got quite significant heart defects, so he gets tired really quickly. He can do it for three, four strides, then that’s too much.” |
| Feeling included | “The whole school do the Race for Life at the end of July so [he] does his in his wheelchair…so it means that he is no different to the rest of his peer group.”~“Parent [P}: [She] has had issues with people saying she’s faking it, because they don’tunderstand the condition that one minute she could be ok,the next minute she can be really quite poorly with it.C: And students thinking that our family as a whole or anyone with our condition is faking it.” |
| Happiness | “She was very pleased. She came out beaming, smiling…It was more grown up for her…She was smiling all the way out of the building really.”~Researcher [R]: Thinking back to before getting a wheelchair, how would you rate feeling happy?Child/young person [C]: Probably about a four.R: And now?C: About ten.” |
| Independence | “[Before having a wheelchair] I didn’t really have any independence because [parent] just moved me everywhere, really.”~“I’ve got Lupus and I can’t push her very far unless it’s on flat. The idea was, she had independence, she could maybe go to college. But she hasn’t got any independence at all.” |
| Managing your condition | “We’ve done loads of different trips…There’s no way I would be able to take him anywhere without a pushchair. Plus, when he’s in a PEG feed, he needs to be strapped in so that I can do a PEG feed.”~“The discomfort comes with the breathing, doesn’t it? Not being able to breathe and the tiredness. She’s got problems with her back, now, which we need to go to the doctors about today. So, having the wheelchair helps with that.” |
| Moving around | “He can’t get around without [wheelchair].”~“[I] couldn’t get around the house properly. Now I could go and sit by the back door.So it helps in the house and out.”~“She wouldn’t do half of what she does without that wheelchair.She would basically be housebound a lot of the time.” |
| Pain and discomfort | “Without it, at some point, I wouldn’t have been able to go out with the family, really, because I’d just be in constant pain with my ribs and my hips. And my knees. It’s all the knock-on effect, isn’t it?”~“She had a plastic back brace fitted which pushed her forward. So to me, she wasn’t sitting as comfortably in it as she could have been, until it was adjusted. That’s my biggest bugbear is when you need an appointment, you need it pretty quickly and you shouldn’t have to be waiting.” |
| Parent or carer wellbeing | “Not hurt mummy/daddy’s backs to carry me”~“P: If I’m having a bad day, we have to stay in the house because I can’t take the weight of your wheelchair.C: Yeah, because it’s a lot. It’s heavy.”~“The handles are in the wrong place…Pushing a pushchair, the handles are usually flat or angled, whereas a wheelchair…It’s an unnatural position. To be pushing her up hills, because she’s quite a weight now, it’s very uncomfortable.” |
| Safety | “[What] he has done is tipped it over backwards. That’s been a bit of a problem.”~“And on one particular occasion, [her] gentleman who used to bring her home, he didn’t quite do it properly…And it went back and [she] hit her head on the concrete and we had a little trip to A&E. Luckily, it was just a cut.”~“I use it mainly in busy areas, where there’s risk with traffic. Because he hasn’t got any sense of danger so he would run into the road and things like that.” |
| Self-care | “‘Helping you to look after yourself, for example, get washed…That’s not relevant because I clean him.”~“If he’s in his chair, he can get to the toilet…Which makes things easier.” |
| Self-esteem and confidence | “He’d had a few comments from his friends and as soon as that happened, [he] wasn’t coming to school and that had a knock-on effect to his health. So, how the wheelchair looks is a big deal.”~“When I’m out with my friends…There would be a point where I would get too tired…And they’d have to push me and I just don’t really want that. I’d just rather be able to just go out with them…Would be a different story if I was able to push myself the whole time.” |
| Social-life | “I was very, very pleased because with the manual [wheelchair]… I didn’t have much of a good relationship with my friends.”~“There is an indirect benefit to her social life, in that if she uses the wheelchair to do certain activities, she’s not too tired, then, to be able to meet up with her friends. Whilst she doesn’t use it directly with her friends, she doesn’t waste her energy doing other things.” |