The tools have not kept up with the care.
Occupational and physical therapists work extremely hard to accommodate their patients. You develop creative solutions, modify existing products, and stretch your expertise to fill gaps that the adaptive equipment market has left wide open for decades.
Without the right tools available, that places real limitation and strain on your work. It extends session times. It limits what you can achieve with patients who have the drive and the potential to do more. It forces you to improvise when you should be focusing entirely on the person in front of you.
That is not a reflection of your skill. It is a reflection of an industry that has not prioritized the clinicians and patients it is supposed to serve.
"We did not build Kinelion for the market. We built it for the people in the room: the clinician and the patient, and the gap between them."
Kinelion was co-designed with occupational therapy specialists from the ground up. Every product decision runs through one filter: does this make the clinician more effective and the patient more independent?