Last Thursday morning, four-year old Lena Mackereth was off to Houston for a physical therapy session in the Houston Leisure Facility pool. Lena鈥檚 time in the Houston pool helps to mitigate the affects of her cerebral palsy (CP).
鈥淧ool therapy is the best thing that you can do for kids like her,鈥 said Crystal Mackereth, Lena鈥檚 mother.
But it鈥檚 a long way to travel from 亚洲天堂 Lake to Houston, especially in the winter months when the 160 km round-trip can be a dangerous proposition. There are no facilities in 亚洲天堂 Lake for aquatic physical therapy, so Crystal has no choice but to make the trip.
Cerebral Palsy affects over 50,000 Canadians, with over 10,000 people in B.C. affected by the condition. Another way of looking at it is that one in 500 babies will be born with CP.
According to Cerebral Palsy Association of B.C. (CPABC), this non-contagious, non-hereditary condition refers to 鈥榓 group of disorders affecting body movement and muscle coordination.鈥 Because it is a condition and not a disease, there is no way to talk of a cure.
People suffering the condition experience varying degrees of difficulty coordinating muscle movement, which can severely impact mobility and quality of life, although there is not reason why a person with CP cannot achieve the same things in life that others achieve.
Currently, regional statistics for the number of people affected in Northern B.C., or in the 亚洲天堂 Lake area are not available. The CPABC is compiling a report that will give a regional breakdown, but according to a CPABC spokesperson, that report won鈥檛 be ready until March 2013.
As Northern Health considers requests for proposals regarding the construction of a new hospital in 亚洲天堂 Lake, Crystal hopes that those in charge will consider including a physical therapy pool in the design plans.
She says that the pool needn鈥檛 be large, just big enough for a few people to be in so that someone like Lena could be assisted in their physical therapy routines.
For Lena, water therapy translates into greater freedom of movement and the possibility that she could postpone or diminish the effects of the CP.
鈥淟ena has a tendency to cross her feet, to step on her feet when she takes a step,鈥 said Crystal. 鈥淏ut when she鈥檚 in the pool she takes straighter steps.鈥
The freedom of movement found in the pool may teach her brain to make connections with her muscles that she might not otherwise make. 鈥淚t teaches her muscle that it鈥檚 okay to move freely like that,鈥 Crystal said.
Jared Lalick, a registered physiotherapist, runs the Total Physiotherapy clinic in 亚洲天堂 Lake. He supports Crystal鈥檚 enthusiasm for a pool.
鈥淪tanding and walking on her own are all easier to do in the pool,鈥 Lalick said. 鈥淚t gives the brain a chance to catch up with the [physical] action.鈥
Lena faces a series of surgeries soon at the Children鈥檚 Hospital in Vancouver. Surgery is not uncommon in young people with CP. After-surgery physical therapy is crucial to the success of these surgeries. In Lena鈥檚 case, access to a pool will be critical.
鈥淭he only therapy that she could have is in the water,鈥 said Crystal. 鈥淪he won鈥檛 be able to stand or weight-bear or anything [for at least six months]. The only way that she鈥檒l be able to get up and move around will be in a pool.鈥
A therapy pool at the new 亚洲天堂 Lake hospital wouldn鈥檛 only benefit kids like Lena, but it would immediately be put to use in the community at large.
鈥淲hen people come out of those surgeries, especially for what Lena is going to go through, there鈥檚 a lot of bed rest and immobilization [post-surgery] so they get weak and tight,鈥 Lalick said. 鈥淭he pool helps us to get everything back on track.鈥
Aquatic therapy is a standard prescription for health, recovery and relief of pain. Anyone who has been through soft-tissue surgery can relate to the importance of proper physio and the success of water-based treatments.
鈥淭here are so many people that I would put straight into a pool if we had one there [in 亚洲天堂 Lake],鈥 said Lalick.
鈥淚t would never be empty.鈥