We have a party member who is has episodes of coughing, breathlessness and unsteadiness. The coughing sometimes means they need something to lean on and they'd like to the option to sit and catch their breath wherever they are, perhaps 3-4 times an hour. I wanted to gather people's thoughts so they can decide what's best for them on this trip.
So far I've come up with the following options:
Cane with seat - I think these are allowed now. $30-$50 to purchase, most seem to not be adjustable height, 3ishlb and kind of awkward to carry. Would be in-hand at all times, but would need to find and press release and possibly fiddle with the cane to sit. No transportation concerns, but I think most attractions want you to tuck it around your feet like any other bag
Rollator - $60-$150+ to purchase. This is adjustable height and angle and I think sitting should be as easy as turning around and sitting on the seat. I'm not sure if it's going to roll out from under them when they lean on it. These seem to be about 20lb and usually fold. There may be storage in the seat. They should be able to just roll it onto the skyliner, but might need to wait in the wheelchair loading zone for the bus? Do attractions handle this like a wheelchair, so it would be waiting at unload? If they're very tired at the end of the day, it doesn't look feasible for someone else to push them back to their hotel room.
Manual wheelchair - $10/day at the parks w/ multi-day, a smidge cheaper with scooterbug for a week. Push handles aren't adjustable-height, and they'd need to turn the wheelchair or walk around it to sit. The angles and extra weight might mean there's less roll-away risk when they lean on it. Closer to 40lb, and offsite rentals should fold for storage. No built-in storage, but a thin bag could be attached to the back. With an offsite rental they'll need to fold or use the accessible gondola for the skyliner and the wheelchair loading zone for the bus. If they're very tired, someone could push them.
ECV has been rejected. They're concerned they'll lose control when they cough, and that it's a lot of assistive device for an intermittent problem.
Is there anything reasonable I'm missing or any insights people could provide into using these options for occasional/intermittent support?
So far I've come up with the following options:
Cane with seat - I think these are allowed now. $30-$50 to purchase, most seem to not be adjustable height, 3ishlb and kind of awkward to carry. Would be in-hand at all times, but would need to find and press release and possibly fiddle with the cane to sit. No transportation concerns, but I think most attractions want you to tuck it around your feet like any other bag
Rollator - $60-$150+ to purchase. This is adjustable height and angle and I think sitting should be as easy as turning around and sitting on the seat. I'm not sure if it's going to roll out from under them when they lean on it. These seem to be about 20lb and usually fold. There may be storage in the seat. They should be able to just roll it onto the skyliner, but might need to wait in the wheelchair loading zone for the bus? Do attractions handle this like a wheelchair, so it would be waiting at unload? If they're very tired at the end of the day, it doesn't look feasible for someone else to push them back to their hotel room.
Manual wheelchair - $10/day at the parks w/ multi-day, a smidge cheaper with scooterbug for a week. Push handles aren't adjustable-height, and they'd need to turn the wheelchair or walk around it to sit. The angles and extra weight might mean there's less roll-away risk when they lean on it. Closer to 40lb, and offsite rentals should fold for storage. No built-in storage, but a thin bag could be attached to the back. With an offsite rental they'll need to fold or use the accessible gondola for the skyliner and the wheelchair loading zone for the bus. If they're very tired, someone could push them.
ECV has been rejected. They're concerned they'll lose control when they cough, and that it's a lot of assistive device for an intermittent problem.
Is there anything reasonable I'm missing or any insights people could provide into using these options for occasional/intermittent support?