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At ease behind the wheel
Driver rehabilitation program helps
driver overcome disability

Debbie Opp's prosthetic leg once made driving nearly impossible. Today, thanks to a driver rehabilitation program offered by Medcenter One, Opp, right is able to drive her own car with ease thanks to therapy provided by Medcenter One's Kori Erikson, left. |
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Born with a short right femur (thigh bone),
Debbie Opp found it difficult to ride a bike
as a youngster.
“Instead of bikes, I rode scooters,” the 1997
Hazelton High School graduate said. “My leg never
grew, but it was better in a small town because
everybody knew you. Everybody knew I was born
with it.”
When it came time to learn to drive a car, Opp
encountered new problems after being fit with a
prosthetic leg, one that doesn’t bend at the knee.
Still, she was able to pass her driving test at age 18.
She simply placed her right leg and prosthetic on the
passenger side and used her left foot for both the gas
pedal and brakes.
Today, 13 years later and living in Bismarck, she’s
still driving, albeit with much more ease than as a
teenager. This is due in no small part to some
modification on her vehicle and training with
Medcenter One Occupational Therapist Kori Erikson,
a certified driver rehabilitation specialist (CDRS) at
Medcenter One Rehabilitation Center’s driving
program, which was the first of its kind in
North Dakota.
Opp faced a new challenge when she upgraded
from a Dodge Spirit to a 2004 Ford Escape, her
first SUV.
“It didn’t have a console, but it had a hump in the
middle, so I actually had to stretch my leg over the
hump and it stayed on the passenger side when I
drove,” she said of her early driving years with her
unbending prosthetic leg, making it more difficult to
fit into a vehicle with a center console.
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That grew tiresome, and she was faced with
amputation as an option to overcome her
driving obstacle.
“Amputation was the only way for me to get a
bending leg,” she said. “But I wasn’t going to do that
just to drive. I’ve gotten by so far with this leg, so I
don’t see any reason to change it yet.”
That proved to be a good choice for Opp, who is employed by the North
Dakota Department of Transportation. She was referred to the Medcenter One
Rehabilitation Center, and Erikson performed a three-hour evaluation last
September. That was followed by two 90-minute training sessions.
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“She was improperly fitted with some adaptive equipment, and she was
having difficulties,” Erikson said.
Some work on the SUV followed. It involved moving the gas pedal from
the right side to the left of the brake pedal.
“This allowed for more leg room for her prosthetic leg on the right side of
the brake, and she operates the gas and brake pedals with her lower left leg,”
Erikson said. “She also sits and operates the vehicle in a more ergonomically
correct position.”
That made things considerably more accommodating for Opp.
After completing the course, Opp was required by state law to retake her
driving test.
No problem.
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Kori Erikson
Occupational therapist
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“She passed on the first attempt,” said a proud Erikson, who has been
involved in the driving program for
13 years.
“We practiced in all types of traffic, including highway and interstate
driving,” Erikson added. “We worked on parallel parking and defensive
driving skills. She was a very quick learner.”
At the Medcenter One Rehabilitation Center, Erikson works with Char
DeMaria, who has been in the program for 15 years and also is a CDRS.
Medcenter One’s is the first program in the state to have CDRS personnel.
Erikson said diagnoses that may warrant a driving evaluation include:
traumatic brain injury, amputation, arthritis, multiple sclerosis, spinal cord
injury and stroke.
General guidelines to determine when professional assessment is necessary
include: physical limitations that may require adaptive driving equipment;
cognitive impairment that may cause problems in identifying driving hazards,
predicting solutions and deciding on an appropriate response; visual
impairments; delayed reaction time and apprehension about an individual’s
driving ability.
“Typically the largest patient population we see are individuals who have
sustained strokes,” Erikson said.
Click here for more information on Medcenter One’s driver rehabilitation program, or call 701.323.6153.
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