Durable Medical Equipment Out of Stock?
AT Reutilization Programs have never been more important! Read the latest AT3 Center Issue Brief.
AT Reutilization Programs have never been more important! Read the latest AT3 Center Issue Brief.
This Earth Day, we are celebrating the role assistive technology (AT) Reuse Programs play to keep durable medical equipment out of scrap metal dumpsters, and with families and individuals who need it.
According to the National MS Society, there are nearly a million people with multiple sclerosis (MS) in the United States. If you know someone impacted by MS, don't forget your AT Act Program for assistance finding tools and strategies for living well.
Simple tools for independence can save thousands of dollars in healthcare.
Puppies are popular this pandemic. Keeping up with them ... well, there's assistive technology (AT) for that.
After a cataract operation went wrong, an Arkansas resident reached out to ICAN (the AR AT Act Program) ... and felt her luck begin to change.
Eugene Litchfield served overseas during World War II and the Korean War. Recently, the town of Orange Massachusetts pulled out all the stops to keep him in his home (including his local reuse program!)
Matthew's family contacted the Iowa AT Act Program. With the right equipment, his mother realized, she could perform his daily care routine herself!
Assistive Technology (AT) Act programs in KS, OK, and SD have partnered with their state Medicaid agencies to retrieve, refurbish, and redistribute valuable DME, making it more accessible to all.
A power wheelchair was recently donated to REquipment, the durable medical equipment (DME) reuse program in Massachusetts. Inside the pocket was an anonymous note intended for the next user.
The Assistive Technology Act Training and Technical Assistance Center(AT3/AT3 Center) is a project funded under grant award # 90ATTA0001 by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Administration for Community Living (ACL). AT3 provides technical assistance and supports to State Assistive Technology (AT) Programs funded under Section 4 of the Assistive Technology Act of 1998, as amended (P.L. 108-364). The AT3 Center is a sponsored project of the Association of Assistive Technology Act Programs (ATAP) The information on this website does not necessarily reflect the position or policy of ACL, and no official endorsement should be inferred.
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