With limited use of his hands, Marine Corps Veteran Lance Knadler could no longer play video games—until engineers at Richmond VA Medical Center designed a controller adapted to his abilities.
Kristine Roberts doesn’t remember the motorcycle accident, but still deals […]
Besides building bonds with one another, the annual TEE Tournament exposes Veterans to a other adaptive sports they can use long after the event is over.
Johnny Birch said if it wasn't for tae kwon do, he'd be dead today. The sport that saved his life has led to a bronze medal at the ParaPan Am Games.
The Iowa City Veterans Healthcare System and DAV hosted the National Disabled Veterans TEE (Train, Expose, Experience) Tournament (NDVTEE), a week-long adaptive golf program that rehabilitates Veterans with life-changing disabilities.
Missing: One leg Description: Orange, red and black with tire […]
She does more on one leg than most do on two, and this Army Vet, Paralympics champ and mom hopes to inspire and motivate with her daily social media posts.
Adaptive golf at the TEE Tournament teaches the blind, paralyzed and those with PTSD to heal and see their full potential on the golf greens of Iowa.
No arms and no legs are no problem for this Coast Guard Vet who still skis and golfs with the best of them through adaptive sports.
From strokes to other major brain injuries, the Minneapolis polytrauma team provides world-class care unlike anything in the civilian community.
Doctors said she'd be paralyzed from the neck down. Twila Adams proved them all wrong and said wheelchair sports changed her life.
Veterans highlight the importance of VA adaptive sports at the 2019 National Veterans Wheelchair Games in Louisville, Kentucky.