Inclusive Playground: Nutter Park at Children’s Mercy Hospital

Inclusive Playground: Nutter Park at Children’s Mercy Hospital

Inclusive Playground: Nutter Park at Children’s Mercy Hospital

Inclusion & Recovery

KCMO Parks & Recreation and Variety KC join forces to bring inclusion to downtown Children’s Hospital Playground.
Variety KC is a leader in inclusive efforts throughout the 11 county Kansas City region. Partnering with Parks and Recreation, our next project is to update the Nutter park near Children’s Mercy Hospital in an effort to make it an inclusive park for all kids – especially those with special needs.

In front of the hospital is a park that is open to the general public and used by therapists treating patients at Children’s Mercy for social and physical exercise opportunities. It was brought to our attention by therapists and families that the park is not inclusive. Patients can’t wheel I.V. poles over the surface, kids with respiratory packs can’t use the swings, patients in expensive power chairs can’ risk riding over the mulch.

In short, the playground that serves more special needs kids than any other in our area – doesn’t truly serve those kids! It does’t allow them to be included, to socialize in a play setting….it becomes just one more place where they are left on the sidelines watching.

Thousands of families come to Children’s Mercy for extended testing/treatment stays. Frequently the siblings and parents stay near the hospital while the patient is admitted for routine tests and treatments. The new inclusive park provides a chance for patients and siblings to have some ”normalcy” and playtime.

Social Inclusion is a determinant of mental health and well-being. This park is important for the neighborhood kids and families and especially important for improving the health and attitudes of patients at Children’s Mercy.

Please support KCMO Parks and Recreation and Variety KC partnership to make this new updated Inclusive playground a reality for all!  Please help us get there by donating.

Dollars need to be raised

Proud Partner

Harness System Innovation

Harness System Innovation

Harness System Innovation

Enliten Harness System – BE Smith Family Center

full building harness system

Variety KC is bringing a one-of-a-kind therapeutic experience for children with special needs in Kansas City. For the first time in the nation, the new BE Smith Family Center, which houses the Lee Ann Britain Infant Development Center, will have the most
complete track harness system to ever be installed in a facility. Variety KC’s harness system allows a child with special needs to move up and down, side to side, right and left, backwards and forwards, down to the ground and back up…just like all other kids.

To bring the system to KC, Variety KC worked with Ralph Cope of Enliten LLC, designer of the adaptive therapy track harness system.

Other mobility devices (gait trainers, walkers, lite gait harnesses) create barriers for social inclusion, but at the new B.E. Smith Family Center, there will be multiple classrooms and therapy spaces outfitted with this harness system.  Now, for the first time, a child with special needs can freely move everywhere within their environment, hands free, like never before!

The result is safer for the child, safer for therapists and caregivers, and according to Dr. Ann Modrcin of Children’s Mercy Hospital, a Variety KC board member, “this will change how therapy is delivered in the future.” It is so empowering for these kids who don’t normally experience the world from this position. We have installed portable systems before, but this will serve the entire building, particularly the feeding tube therapy room where being upright is the preferred position.

FIRST EVER 3D Printed Prosthetic Arm

FIRST EVER 3D Printed Prosthetic Arm

FIRST EVER 3D Printed Prosthetic Arm

child's 3D printed prosthetic limb in the world

hours of coding and printing

Innovation Changes a Life

•December 2017

The Need

Four-year-old Hudson needed a prosthetic arm. However, prosthetics are usually very expensive and children’s prosthetics are rarely covered by insurance.

The Solution

Variety KC and volunteers at at the STEAM (Science Technology Engineering Art and Math) Studio at Gould Evans Architecture Firm created a 3D prosthetic arm for 4 year old Hudson.

As prosthetics are usually very expensive and rarely covered by insurance, the 3D printing solution is both innovative AND affordable.

If you want help getting a prosthetic print you can contact Variety KC, as we continue our mission of helping Kansas City Children be Active, Be Social and Belong.

Featured

Variety Kid

Hudson

Four-year-old Hudson needed a prosthetic arm. However, prosthetics are usually very expensive and children’s prosthetics are rarely covered by insurance. The solution can be a 3D printing solution is both innovative AND affordable. For the first time in Kansas City, Variety KC underwrote this ground-breaking effort as volunteers at the STEAM (Science Technology Engineering Art and Math) Studio at Gould Evans Architecture Firm created a 3D prosthetic arm Hudson. Hudson even got to pick the colors! Help change the lives of other kiddos like Hudson. If you want help another child get a prosthetic print, please donate so we continue our mission of helping Kansas City Children be Active, Be Social and Belong.

Find Out How to Get Involved

Volunteer for Variety KC, become a sponsor, champion a fundraiser with our support, or make a donation.

KC Zoo: Inclusive Playground

KC Zoo: Inclusive Playground

KC Zoo: Inclusive Playground

Zoo inclusive playground in the world

Visitors projected every year

FIRST Zoo Inclusive Playground – Variety KC Exploration Play

Project Start Date:

March 18, 2018

Grand Opening:

May 4, 2018

Location:

The Kansas City Zoo 6800 Zoo Dr, Kansas City, MO 64132

The Need

Children with special needs, and all children, benefit tremendously from inclusive play. Participation and availability of activities can be challenging due to:

  • Sensory and social skill issues that can make public experiences difficult
  • Lack of truly inclusive opportunities at major attractions such as a zoo or park
  • Equipment and venues that are ADA compliant, but still pose hurdles to some individuals

As “inclusion” becomes more than a buzzword, organizations are rethinking the design and build of public projects. One such project is the partnership between Variety Kansas City (“Variety KC”), an organization that advocates for the inclusiveness of children with disabilities within the Kansas City community and Friends of the Zoo, Inc. (“FOTZ”), the operator of the Kansas City Zoo (“Zoo”). The Zoo has a significant interest in ensuring that all guests of the Zoo, including children with disabilities, have a positive experience while visiting the Zoo.

The Kansas City Zoo plays such an important role in connecting children to the natural world. It’s a childhood rite of passage and a memory-maker. Still, not every child has been able to fully experience a zoo and facilities all over the nation are beginning to implement programs of inclusion to remedy that.

Accessible is not necessarily inclusive according to Deborah Wiebrecht, the Executive Director of Variety KC. No other Zoo in the nation has launched such an inclusive effort.

This is the first all inclusive play exhibit at any Zoo nationwide. Kansas City Zoo will be a leader and set an example for other Zoo’s to follow by offering inclusion for all kids. No other zoo has committed to the level of inclusiveness as our zoo in Kansas City. This partnership ensures that the zoo’s new Exhibit in Africa a Natural Play area is fully inclusive, allowing all children to participate together. Other elements of inclusion has also been made available through sensory equipment opportunities.

 

What it Includes

From the play surface, throughout each feature of the natural play area, every consideration has been made for absolute inclusiveness. The partnership started in 2017, as FOTZ was planning for a new Nature Play area at the Zoo, Variety KC was consulted in order to ensure the area’s features were inclusive to children with disabilities.

  • A zip line with companion harnesses so a parent or partner can accompany a child with special needs.  
  • An “elephant swing” that is accessible for children with special needs, but accommodates multiple children – encouraging engagement among all kids on the swing.
  • Special solid surfacing will allow children in power wheelchairs or using gait walkers to access all areas of the exhibit. (Although ADA accepted, a single piece of mulch from a mulched playground surface can damaging the mechanics of a $10,000 power wheelchair.)
  • Low sensory area for calming children and for breast-feeding mothers seeking privacy.
  • Special sensory kits with weighted blankets and noise canceling headphones are available for checkout.

Wiebrecht explains that the most important part of this effort is the social aspect of the play area. “Play time is the key time for children to learn to interact, to resolve conflict, and realize we’re all different. Because the majority of playgrounds and play areas are not inclusive, some children don’t often meet their peers with special needs. Inclusive opportunities like the zoo’s will allow peers to meet and play together, overcoming obstacles and differences together. This is how a caring community is created, this is how to raise open-minded, empathetic, and cooperative adults.”

The inclusiveness extends beyond children. This totally accessible and inclusive destination is also a benefit to grandparents who may be mobility challenged, or for a parent who may be a disabled veteran. “One out of four families has a member with a disability. Can you imagine excluding 25% of your friends from joining you?” asks Wiebrecht.

“What FOTZ is doing will improve lives here in Kansas City and offer enjoyment to the thousands of families who visit our area and zoo each year. Variety KC is proud to be a part of this exciting project.”

 

Additional Details

Everyone benefits from regular physical activity, especially children with special needs. Most disabilities can be accommodated with adaptive equipment or technique adjustments – the benefits are many:

  • Improvement in muscle strength, coordination, and flexibility.
  • Improved exercise endurance, cardiovascular efficiency
  • Better balance, motor skills and body awareness
  • Improved behavior, academics, focus, self-confidence
  • Experiences a sense of accomplishment and personal satisfaction
  • Can increase appetite, improve quality of sleep
  • Decrease in secondary health complications like obesity, high blood pressure, low HDL (“good”) cholesterol and diabetes
  • Provides outlet for physical energy, helps them cope with anxiety, stress and depression
  • Offers opportunities to engage with “typical” friends and family members

Variety KC is a local chapter of International Variety and all money raised in our area stays here. Based on feedback from other Variety chapters, Kansas City is rapidly becoming a leader in inclusive communities. In the past three years, Variety KC has been involved in building two inclusive ball fields, four inclusive playgrounds, launched the first inclusive ice hockey and ice skating programs, and consulted on a number of inclusion focused projects.

Find Out How to Get Involved

Volunteer for Variety KC, become a sponsor, champion a fundraiser with our support, or make a donation.

Variety KC Fusion Fitness Exercise Video Series

Variety KC Fusion Fitness Exercise Video Series

Variety KC Fusion Fitness Exercise Video Series

Making Fitness Fun for Everyone!

Benefits of Videos

• Improvement in muscle strength, coordination, and flexibility

• Improved exercise endurance, cardiovascular efficiency

• Better balance, motor skills and body awareness

• Improved behavior, academics, focus, self-confidence

• Experiences a sense of accomplishment and personal satisfaction

• Can increase appetite, improve quality of sleep

 

More Information

Letter from Children’s Mercy

Each year, Variety International hosts a global convention and during that event, various efforts are recognized with awards. One of the biggest awards is the Innovation Award and this year’s winner was an innovative project from Fusion Fitness in Overland Park and Variety KC. It is a series of inclusive exercise videos specifically designed for all kids to participate. The videos star Variety Kids with special needs, their friends and family members.

The videos are free and available to the public on Variety KC’s YouTube channel.

 

Variety KC Kids Workout: Exercise for All Abilities

There are thousands of exercise and fitness videos on the market, but none specifically designed for inclusion of all parents, all kids – especially Variety Kids with special needs. Variety KC (Tent 8) partnered with Fusion Fitness in Overland Park, Kansas, to create a series of videos that would do just that. Variety KC Kids Workout – a safe and effective workout for kids of all abilities. Best of all, these innovative videos are free!

Fusion’s owner and fitness professional, Darby Bender, donated her time and location for the video shoot. Bender is featured in the videos along with Sarah Duffy (wife of KC Royals pitcher, Danny Duffy), and several local KC kids with different disabilities, including Cerebral Palsy, Dwarfism and Down Syndrome. Therapists and physicians were involved in the planning of the actual exercise programs, but as always – it is wise to consult your personal physician before starting a new exercise program.

“The vision was to provide another level of inclusion for local kids through an exercise video that allows special needs children the opportunity to move at their pace, strengthen muscles and challenge their physical strength and feel good!” says Deborah Wiebrecht, Variety KC Executive Director.

Bender says, “This is an area of fitness that has been underserved, yet the benefits of activity and exercise are even more important for children with special needs. We’re excited to launch this video for all kids, especially our friends at Variety.”

The videos have had a positive impact on health and budgets! Parents have been especially appreciative of the flexibility of the videos; it can be difficult to find times and places that allow for a family to participate in fitness together and videos can be costly. The Variety Kids Workout Video series is available online, for free, and is currently being used at local schools, day care centers, home schools and hospitals.

All Variety Tents are welcome to use the videos as well. You can access the Kids Workout videos on the Variety KC website – www.varietykc.org.

On a side note, the crew shooting the video said it was their favorite project ever. They were amazed that they were able to produce the videos in just one take! The kids were obviously having a great time participating at a variety of levels and it shows so clearly on their faces. Because the very nature of the videos are demonstration-based, they aren’t reliant on speech translation – making them useful around the globe.

All kids deserve the right to fitness and fun and this is just another way that Variety is a leader in making sure all kids have a chance to Be Active, Be Social, and Belong.

Variety KC Kids Workout: Exercise for All Abilities

Get your heart pumping with Darby and the Variety Kids. We are making fitness fun for all ages and abilities and cannot wait to move our bodies with you!

Cardio Warm Up

Increase your cardiovascular endurance with full body movements!

Arms & Abs

Strengthen your upper-body and work your arms up, down and all around!

Core Floor Workout

Improve your core stability and balance with abdominal and back exercises!

Cool Down

Cool down and relax your mind with a full body stretch to feel great!

Thank you to Mark Fisher, MD, Pediatric Rehabilitation Fellow at Children’s Mercy Hospital and Clinic, Dr. Kendra Gagnon PT, PHD and fusion Fitness for helping us create and monitor this safe and effective workout for kids of all abilities.

Proud Partners