Dee Dee's wheelchair confines her to home. Her family is fundraising for freedom - Action News
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Dee Dee's wheelchair confines her to home. Her family is fundraising for freedom

Dee Dee House can't walk or talk. Her family wants a $2,500 all-terrain stroller to help her do simple things, like visit her cousin across the road. The stroller isn't covered by assistance programs, so the family has started a fundraiser to buy it themselves.

Government programs won't fund all-terrain pushchair that can traverse reserve's unpaved sidewalks, road

Family members of Diedre Faye House, 31, are fundraising for an all-terrain stroller that could navigate the grass and mud outside of her house and the roads of the Paul First Nation reserve. (Mildred House)

Dee Dee House spends most of her time in a rickety wheelchair, trapped in her parents' home on the Paul First Nationreserve.

A wooden ramp runs from her room to the yard, but itdrops off ontograss andmud.Her wheelchair's worn tires can't make it outto thedirt road.

Injured as a baby,Diedre Faye House (her family calls her Dee Dee) can't walk or talk.With limited use of her arms, the 31-year-old relies on her brothers and her parents, now in their60s.

What the family wants more than anything is a $2,500 all-terrain stroller, a mobility device that would allow them to help Dee Dee to do simple things, like visit her cousin across the road.

'It's a need. It's not a want'

6 years ago
Duration 1:48
Mildred House says her disabled cousin needs an all-terrain wheelchair to get around on the reserve, but government programs consider the $2,500 chair nonessential.

But the stroller isn't coveredunder the federal or provincial assistance programs Dee Dee is eligible for.

Her family has started a Facebook fundraiser, hoping to buy it themselves.

Being housebound isfrustrating forDee Deeand the rest of the family, said her cousinMildred House,a frequent visitor.

"They can't take her out," said House, 24. "They can't go for a walk with her. She just basically sits there unless ... she has an appointment."

When that's the case, House said Dee Dee's brothers have to carry her and the heavy wheelchair to the family's nearly 20-year-old SUV, load her in, disassemble her wheelchair, load it, then reassemble it when they arrive.

The ramp from Diedre Faye House's room ends in grass and mud. (Mildred House)

A 'nonessential' item

The assistance programs available to Dee Dee through thefederal and provincial governments consider the stroller nonessential.

But to the family, it's anything but.

"We're here trying to fundraise money for a strollerjust so she can get around," House said of her cousin.

Dee Dee is eligible for non-insured health benefits throughIndigenous Services Canada, but the stroller the family needs is not among the mobility aids covered by the program.

In an email statement, the federal department said it encouragesclients and health providers "to explore opportunities to address health needs within the context of eligible benefits" and notes that Alberta's Assured Income for the Severely Handicappedprogram, which Dee Dee also qualifies for, has programs as well.

Alberta Health, which refers to the stroller as a jogging stroller, said it's notcovered under Alberta Aids to Daily Living either.

"As jogging strollers are not considered basic medical equipment, they do not meet the program's mandate and are not provided," the provincial department said in an email statement.

Diedre Faye House (left) and Mildred House. (Mildred House)

Delay getting new wheelchair

Dee Dee's wheelchair is in poor repair. Most of the padding is ripped and the family often drapes blankets over it, so it doesn't poke and scratch her.

Under the federal non-insured health benefits program, Dee Dee is overdue for another wheelchair. The recommended replacement guidelines stipulate clients are eligible for new ones every five years, and hers is already much older.

"She was supposed to be getting a new wheelchair," House said. "But it just keeps getting pushed and pushed and pushed and pushed."

House isn't sure about the reasons for the delay, and people from the band's health centre who returned calls from CBC News said they were not authorized to speak about or had no knowledge about Dee Dee's file.

In the email statement, Indigenous Services Canada said it couldn't speak to a specific case due to client confidentiality, but that "all requests that meet program coverage criteria for eligible clients are approved."

'There's so much she wants to do'

Given that the road isn't paved and there are no sidewalks, even a new wheelchair would not solve Dee Dee's mobility problems, the family said.

House said families on reserves caring for loved ones with disabilities face a unique set of challenges.

Neither of Dee Dee's parents work because their daughter requires 24/7 care.

"Living on reserve, they're limited," House said, who started the fundraiser for thestroller after her aunt told her about the difficulties they'd been having navigating the system.

"She's a happy girl. She's fun to be around," House said of her cousin. "There's so much that she wants to do."

House said Dee Dee's wants are simple.

"She always wants to come over and visit. She wants to come here. But she can't. It's too much work "

Her cousin recently communicated that she would like to go to the movies, she said.

"I was taking my daughter and my niece," House said. "Before I went to the movies, I went to stop by and see her.

"She started getting excited, and I asked her what'sup.I'm like, 'Do you want to come with me?' 'Yeah! Yeah! Yeah!' And I'm like, 'OK, you know what? I'm going to get you a stroller, and when I get you that stroller, I'm taking you to the movies.'"

On Facebook, House has raised about $600 of the $2,500 needed to purchase the stroller.

roberta.bell@cbc.ca

@roberta__bell