Sunday, April 29, 2012

Lend-A-Hand interview with Jason Davis


Here's a link to the interview with Jason Davis that ran last year on KSTP Minneapolis/St.Paul
CLICK HERE TO VIEW:

Fishing Season for the Lend-A-Hand


It's that time of year once again! Spring is here and so is the fishing opener. I wanted to share some photos that show our customers are using Lend-A-Hand for fishing.

The first 2 images show Lend-A-Hand being used for fishing by rapping the Velcro straps around the calf of the leg (just below the knee cap). This gentlemen had a stroke and now can jig and set the hook with Lend-A-Hand on his leg. He just loves being able to fish again.

The last 2 pictures are showing how a paraplegic uses the longest strap (15”) first snaps it into the front hook, then wraps it around the reel of the fishing pole, then through the hook on the other side of Lend-A-Hand, then sticks the Velcro together. What a great way to get out and catch the big one. 
  
If you have any questions or have information on how you use Lend-A-Hand please let us know so we can share and help others.





Lend-A-Hand® is a patent pending assistant device. Once put on, it increases mobility while decreasing the strain off the individuals shoulders, arms, back and legs. Lend-A-Hand helps allow the individual to play golf, wash cars, paint, rake, sweep and wash floors, go fishing and other activities and duties.



For more information, or to order, please visit: 
Or call us at 651-345-GOLF(4653)

Lend-A-Hand in the Austin Daily Herald


Product Gives Life to Limbs
from the Austin Daily Herald
Published 6:12am Monday, October 11, 2010

Kay Smaby and Dan Stewart have a few things in common. One was a former nurse, the other a Corporal in the Marines. Yet both have suffered a stroke which has left them partially paralyzed, which is why they both use a Lend-a-Hand, a product invented by a local inventor based out of Lake City, Minnesota.
Stewart, who held the flag during this year’s Fourth of July march, suffered a traumatic brain injury in August 2005 when an insurgent’s improvised explosive device blew up in a Dumpster along a roadway in Iraq, where Stewart’s Humvee vehicle was traveling.

Stewart’s left arm is partially paralyzed from a stroke he suffered during the recovery process. Yet he’s used his Lend-A-Hand, which is in essence a sleeve for a handle that he can attach to his arm, to help pull weeds from St. Edward’s Church, along with raking, shoveling snow and dirt. He recently edged the property around the Church as well.

“It’s such a great thing to have,” Stewart said. “To feel like I can use both arms again.”

When Stewart first started pulling weeds using his Lend-A-Hand, he was sore for a couple of days. Since then, he’s managed to rehabilitate some of the muscles.

“The more I used it, it stopped getting sore,” Stewart said.

Kay Smaby spent 25 years as an Intensive Care Unit nurse at Austin Medical Center before retiring, unfortunately suffering a stroke five years ago. Since she got her Lend-A-Hand, she’s cooked scrambled eggs, something she couldn’t have done before because of the limited use on her right arm.
“She’s able to do more things,” Dick Smaby, her husband said. “In her situation, it’s always hard, you tend to want to do things for her. People with strokes want to be able to do things for themselves. I feel good that she can do that now.”
-Trey
Dan Stewart performs yard work Friday at St. Edwards Church.
Stewart wears a Lend-a-Hand on his left arm,
which allows him to use it to rake leaves

Lend-A-Hand® is a patent pending assistant device. Once put on, it increases mobility while decreasing the strain off the individuals shoulders, arms, back and legs. Lend-A-Hand helps allow the individual to play golf, wash cars, paint, rake, sweep and wash floors, go fishing and other activities and duties.

For more information, or to order, please visit: 
Or call us at 651-345-GOLF(4653)

Lend-A-Hand in the Mankato Free Press

New Meaning to the Words, "Helping Hand"
Lend-a-Hand device works wonders
By Tanner Kent
The Free Press

MANKATO — Neil Schalke and Dan Stewart have much in common. Both are Marines. Both served in Iraq. Both bear visible scars of war and both worried their disabilities would never allow them to enjoy their favorite pastime again. Now, both have Mike Duncan to thank the next time they go fishing.

“It’ll be good,” said Schalke after trying on the device that will give back at least one piece of the life he nearly lost six years ago in Iraq. “It’s probably been three years,” since he last went fishing, he said.
Schalke, a Wisconsin native, is a Minnesota State University student whose hands were severely injured in the fall of 2004 when a roadside explosive tore through his Humvee near Fallujah, Iraq.

More than a dozen surgeries were performed on his hands in the ensuing years. On his right hand, two fingers are missing; his left, though intact, has no feeling and little functionality. To this day, pieces of shrapnel will periodically work their way to the surface of his skin.

Stewart, who hails from Austin, suffered even more serious injuries when he was struck by shrapnel from a roadside explosive in 2005. He spent 32 days in a coma, had two metal plates inserted in his skull and suffered arm injuries due to blood clots that developed during his coma.

Several months ago, Stewart met Duncan for the first time. Duncan, a Lake City man who describes himself as a problem-solver, gave him a device he invented called Lend-a-Hand. The pseudo-prosthetic limb allowed Stewart to regain the ability to perform a variety of tasks, from shoveling snow to mowing grass to wetting a line.

Schalke, however, met Duncan for the first time on Thursday with help from a mutual contact. Stewart traveled to the meeting with Duncan, as well as Sue Seeger, who suffered a stroke at age 20 and inspired Duncan to create the Lend-a-Hand eight years ago when she shared her dream of playing golf despite being paralyzed on her right side.

“Eight years ago, it was a dead arm,” she said, adding that she now hits a golf ball 150 yards, and straight. “Now, I have all this range of motion.”

The meeting between Duncan and Schalke was set up by Pat Dotter, a representative of the Procurement Technical Assistance Center — which is, essentially, a federal program that helps small businesses to get government contracts.

Duncan had contacted Dotter a few months ago to help make his product available to veterans and military hospitals. Dotter also knew Schalke and said she immediately recognized how Duncan’s invention could improve his life.

“The thing that sold me on the product was seeing the excitement on Neil’s face when I told him he could fish again,” Dotter said. “That’s the perk of what I do.”
Lend-a-Hand attaches to a user’s non-functional arm or wrist. It stabilizes the arm and includes a long pocket in which anything with a handle can be inserted — including a fishing pole.

After designing the prototype eight years ago for Seeger, Duncan spent the next several years traveling with stroke victims, amputees, cerebral palsy sufferers and others to make modifications. He added grooves to the fasteners so users could tighten them with their teeth. He added color to one side of the device so those with head injuries or vision impairments could tell which side was supposed to face forward. He’s also made attachments for the device, including one that allows users to fire a 10-gauge shotgun so they can hunt.

Duncan describes himself as a problem-solver and scoffs at the notion that his inventions are due to intellect. Instead, he credits God and wife for inspiration (even though the latter died eight years ago from cancer) and said he’s lived an “interesting and exciting life,” from starting a junior bowling league in Lake City when he was a teenager to starting a band and playing music across the country.

But none of that, he said, compares to the sense of accomplishment he feels when people like Schalke are given a piece of their life back. “For an old guy like me, it’s exciting,” he said. “I’ve never designed a product that has affected so many people.”

Neil Schalke (left), an MSU student and Purple Heart recipient,
received a device Thursday that would finally allow him
to fish despite extensive injuries to his hands. The device was invented
by Mike Duncan (right), a Lake City man who has invented several
other contraptions. “There is life for these people,” he said.

Mike Duncan’s Lend-a-Hand invention allows those with 
arm, wrist and hand disabilities to regain several abilities, 
including shoveling, cooking, raking — and fishing.


Lend-A-Hand® is a patent pending assistant device. Once put on, it increases mobility while decreasing the strain off the individuals shoulders, arms, back and legs. Lend-A-Hand helps allow the individual to play golf, wash cars, paint, rake, sweep and wash floors, go fishing and other activities and duties.

For more information, or to order, please visit: 
http://www.evenparenterprises.com/
Or call us at 651-345-GOLF(4653)

The Lend-A-Hand


Approximately four years ago, a young lady contacted me about playing the game of golf. The challenge, however, was that she had suffered a stroke at the age of twenty paralyzing her right side. Now, she wears a brace to support her right leg and can only use her left arm for swinging the club. I met with her at the local driving range to find out what ability she had.
As I observed her swinging capabilities, I was able to develop the concept for Lend–A–Hand. While wearing Lend–A–Hand she is able to play golf using only her left arm. From this experience I was able to find many additional uses for physically challenged and able bodied individuals. I have found Lend–A–Hand to help people with arthritis, carpal tunnel, stroke, cerebral palsy and amputees to name a few.




Lend-A-Hand® is a patent pending assistant device. Once put on, it increases mobility while decreasing the strain off the individuals shoulders, arms, back and legs. Lend-A-Hand helps allow the individual to play golf, wash cars, paint, rake, sweep and wash floors, go fishing and other activities and duties.

For more information, or to order, please visit: 
Or call us at 651-345-GOLF(4653)