8-year-old boy raises money to buy his bestie a new wheelchair

Authored by waxra.com and submitted by Phelphael

When Paul Burnett first met Kamden Houshan in kindergarten, the two boys quickly became friends. They bonded over playing superheroes and creating goofy videos. While others often focus on Kamden’s wheelchair and disability, Paul never acted like Kamden was different. Kamden, 8, who lives in Poway, California, was born with a tumor on his T2 and T3 vertebras. The tumor was so large it engulfed his spinal cord. While he has had three surgeries to de-bulk the tumor, Kamden is paraplegic and relies on a wheelchair.

The wheelchair gives Kamden freedom, but it is heavy and bulky, which sometimes makes it hard for Kamden to push himself. And, it’s causing accidents. When the boys were visiting a farm on a playdate,

Paul looked on in horror as the wheelchair tipped forward and dumped out Kamden. Medical, the state’s Medicare, only pays for a wheelchair once every five years, and the Houshans couldn’t afford another chair.

After the boys finished second grade this year, Paul told his mom he wanted to help Kamden get a new wheelchair.

He had recently watched a video about fundraising websites and he thought if he started a campaign for Kamden he could raise enough money to get him a customized wheelchair.

Burnett interviewed him and the two wrote an intro for the Go Fund Me. In two weeks, the campaign exceeded its goal of $3,900 and raised $5,455, which covers the cost of a customized wheelchair.

AllHarlowsEve on July 26th, 2017 at 12:08 UTC »

This would be much more uplifting if I didn't know how absolutely arbitrary the insurance rules for pretty much every insurance company are. Like, if you, as a kid, wait to get a chair at, say, 3 when strollers stop being convenient, from 3 to 5 you need the same seat/cushion thing, and from 3 to 8 you're using the same chair, then 8 to 13 you're using the same chair, growth spurt be damned. Thirteen to 18 is usually not as serious, but if you're a boy, you could spring up like a weed and be crammed in.

TL;DR Know who makes decisions about disabled people? Not disabled people.

EDIT: Oops I'm illiterate.

egondelania on July 26th, 2017 at 10:28 UTC »

Michael Jackson would have loved them.

I mean look at their costumes. That's dedication.

themeatbridge on July 26th, 2017 at 10:23 UTC »

The article seems to stop in the