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About the solution
Hector lost both arms in 1992, due to a work accident.
"I lost my arms, but I didn't lose that sense of responsibility that I have to be there for them," he recalls. "And that kept me going. I am Hector Picard. I am a man first, I'm a father, I'm a husband. I have to be that. I'm not going to sit back and wait for life to pass by. I'm going to grab it and live it to the fullest and I'm going to help people along the way."
Basktball was and is Hector’s favorite sport. So he cut a ring around a bucket, attached it to a sports prosthetic socket and created a DIY way to throw, bounce and shoot.
“I wanted to keep playing basketball and got really motivated because I love the sport so much,” Hector said. “So I created a basketball device for myself. It was very simple”, he explained.
The device caught TRS Prosthetics’ attention, a company that specializes in developing body-powered prosthetic devices for individuals missing a hand(s).
TRS and Hector worked together for six months fine-tuning and refining his original model. Together they made it more versatile to serve a wide range of adaptive athletes. Today, the TRS model is called the HP Hoopster. The new model is extremely lightweight, weighing 6 ounces, and made of a stiff but flexible polymer dual-surface “hoop” which captures the shape and size of a basketball perfectly.
More info: http://www.trsprosthetics.com/product/basketball-hoopster/
Adapted from: http://bit.ly/2op8qF6
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这些解决方案不应包括使用药物,化学品或生物制品(包括食品);创伤性设备;冒犯性的,商业或内在危险的内容。该解决方案未经医学验证。请谨慎进行!如果您有任何疑问,请咨询健康专家。
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