Adaptive Equipment for Daily Living: What You Should Know

Adaptive equipment extends your reach, reduces strain, and makes daily tasks possible or easier after spinal cord injury. The right tools can turn a task that needs help — dressing, bathing, cooking, getting around the house — into something you do on your own. Good equipment also protects your shoulders, wrists, and skin, which have to last a lifetime.

What works changes over time. The setup that fits at six months post-injury may need adjusting as your strength, spasticity, weight, or living situation changes (per Reeve). The best approach is to match equipment to your actual function, start simple and reliable, train with a therapist, and reassess regularly.

This guide covers equipment by everyday task — dressing, eating, bathroom, grooming, home, communication, and driving — plus how to get equipment, fund it, and keep it working. Wheelchairs and transfer equipment have their own deep dive in the transfers-mobility guide; here the wheelchair is treated as one category among many. For why protecting your arms matters and the ergonomics behind these choices, see upper-limb-function.

🚨 Red Flags — When Equipment Failure Becomes an Emergency

Equipment problems are usually a nuisance, not a crisis. But a few situations need urgent action:

Tell responders: “I have a spinal cord injury and use adaptive equipment for daily function. This happened while using [specific item].”

Understanding How Equipment Is Matched to You

Adaptive equipment is not one-size-fits-all, and the right tool depends mostly on your function, not just your injury level.

Dressing Aids

Dressing aids turn fine-motor and bending tasks into ones you can manage seated and with limited grip.

Eating and Kitchen Aids

Equipment for meals focuses on replacing grip and reducing carrying.

Bathroom and Hygiene Aids

The bathroom is where the right equipment most reduces both fall risk and shoulder strain.

Grooming Aids

Home and Environment

Small changes to the space remove daily strain; bigger ones open up the home.

Communication and Computer Access

Access technology keeps phones, computers, and the wider world within reach at any level of hand function.

Driving and Transport Aids

Assistive Technology for Limited Hand Function

When grip and pinch are weak or absent, a few principles unlock most tasks:

Wheelchairs and Mobility (Brief — See Transfers-Mobility)

Your wheelchair is one piece of adaptive equipment, but it is central enough to deserve its own guide.

For chair selection, propulsion, cushions, maintenance, and transfers, see the transfers-mobility guide.

How to Get and Pay for Equipment

Most adaptive equipment is durable medical equipment (DME) that is prescribed, fitted, and funded through a process — not bought off a shelf.

Maintenance, Backup, and Reassessment

Sports and Recreation Equipment

Staying active has real health benefits, and almost any sport can be adapted (per SCIRE).

See the community-work-recreation guide for getting involved beyond the equipment.

When to Call Your Occupational Therapist or Rehab Team (Non-Emergency)

What Many People Find Helpful

The most satisfied long-term users tend to say the same things: “I started with the basics and added only what I truly needed,” “I practiced with an OT or a peer until it felt automatic,” and “I keep backups and a repair kit everywhere I spend time.” Many find that one well-chosen item — a good reacher, a reliable shower chair, voice control of the home — removes more daily frustration than a drawer full of gadgets. Trial periods at independent living centers, rehab fairs, and peer networks are gold for learning what actually works in real life, not just on paper.

Evidence & Sources

Synthesized from Christopher & Dana Reeve Foundation booklets (Preparing to Transition Home, Restoring Hope, Top 10 Questions for the Newly Injured), the PVA Consortium Upper Limb Consumer Guide, the MSKTC SCI Model System wheelchair consumer factsheet, and SCIRE Community handouts on wheelchair provision and adapted sports and equipment (retrieved 2026-06-24). See RESEARCH-SOURCES.md for complete provenance. Equipment-selection and upper-limb-protection principles draw heavily on the PVA upper limb guide and the Reeve transition-to-home materials; wheelchair-provision and funding detail draws on the MSKTC and SCIRE sources.

Printable One-Pager Notes


Adaptive equipment is an extension of your body and your independence. Matched to your function, chosen with an OT, trialed before you buy, and reassessed as life changes, the right tools conserve energy, protect your arms and skin, and let you do more of what matters. Start simple, train properly, keep a plan B, and revisit your setup as your needs shift. Used alongside the upper-limb-function, transfers-mobility, and pressure-injuries guides, good equipment is the kind you stop noticing — because it just works.

Sources & further reading

Last updated 2026-06-24