Relaunched
Web site for Determined2heal offers a wealth of advice to those with
spinal injuries, and the Potomac man behind it is thinking big.
By Aaron Stern/The Almanac
One-Stop shop
The
newly relaunched Web site for Josh Basile's nonprofit, Determined2heal,
has approximately 130 pages of information for all things related to
spinal cord injuries. The site provides lifestyle advice, medical tips,
equipment guides and links to a wide array of sites on the Internet.
The end result, Basile said, is that the site is a wealth of
information for both the newly injured and those who have been dealing
with spinal cord injuries for a while. To find out how ways to adjust
to life with a spinal cord injury or to learn more about the
Determined2Heal foundation, go to: www.determined2heal.org

Photo by Aaron Stern/The Almanac
Josh Basile and his father John Basile in the home office for Josh’s nonprofit, Determined2Heal.
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Two days before the expected launch of his nonprofit’s revamped
Web site Josh Basile was in his wheelchair in front of his computer,
trying to pull it all together.
Like
any self-taught Web designer, Basile hit a couple of snags coming down
the homestretch. Basile needed to find a different way to store some of
the pictures so they consumed less memory. Not all of the links that
the site would provide were active yet.
“It’s like
painting a picture,” Basile said. “Using the software is
about building layers and speaking its language.”
Basile worked out the kinks, and on Sunday Jan. 28, he lauched the vastly upgraded Web site for determined2heal.org.
BASILE’S
WEB SITE is an Extension of the nonprofit organization of the same name
that he launched in July 2005, nearly a year after he was paralyzed
from the neck and down in an accident at Bethany Beach, Del. The
organization advocates spinal cord injury research — including
stem cell research — beach safety and the dissemination of
treatment and lifestyle information to those with spinal cord injuries.
Determined2Heal’s Web site has been around since the
organization launched, but it was not all that Basile wanted it to be.
The newly renovated version still desribes the nonprofit, but its
primary service is to serve as a one-stop shop for people looking for
all things spinal injury-related.
Medical information and
lifestyle advice abound for those with spinal injuries. The site has
links to medical and recreational equipment, from blood pressure
monitors, to tank-like wheel chairs for backwoods hunting. There is
advice on the basics of day-to-day living, travel advice, and
relationship and sexual health advice.
“There are a thousand
sites out there,” said Basile about similar sites, “and
they each do one thing well. This brings together all of the
information that is out there to one place.”
Peter Burns is a Walt Whitman sophomore and a friend of Basile's who helped Basile create the original site last summer.
"Josh
is a real good guy for doing this," said Burns, who helped gather
information for the Web site about conversion vans and other travel
tips for those who are paralyzed. "He works on it practically non-stop;
he puts in more hours a day on the Web site than I probably do on
school."
One feature that Basile is excited about is a color-coded
diagram of the spine on the site’s homepage entitled ‘Click
your level of Injury.’ Each of the Vertebrae are labeled and
coded by color and will guide a visitor to the typical results of each
degree of injury.
For example, click on the C5 vertebrae near the
top of the neck and you learn that those injured in this area can
typically move their arms using their shoulder and biceps muscles, a
Ventilator is not needed for breathing, and that through training and
the use of special equipment persons with this injury can hope to eat,
drink, bathe and drive with out any assistance. Each level of injury is
different and the site provides specific information for each one.
“My
mind and my words are the two best tools I have,” said Basile.
“Since my injury, I feel like I speak spinal cord… and my
words can help people make the transition.”
THE PAST
two-and-a-half years for Basile have been marked by drastic change and
profound progress. While in the hospital, Basile was told he would
never get off of the respirator that was keeping him alive. He went
beyond getting off the respirator, and after two and a half years of
intensive Physical Therapy Basile has worked his way from an electronic
wheelchair that moved in response to sips and puffs on a plastic straw,
to a joystick-controlled, motorized wheel chair, to this month, when he
began to use a power-assist manual wheelchair around his home in River
Falls.
A varsity tennis player during his freshman year at
Skidmore College, Basile said he lost 50 pounds in the first three
weeks after his injury. Through the therapy — four-hour sessions
each day in his basement gym — Basile said he has gained all of
the weight back. He does exercises on machines for his upper body, but
advanced electrical equipment allows him to exercise his legs and
maintain their muscle mass, said his father John Basile.
“We do it so when the science evolves to the point for him to walk again, he’ll be ready,” John Basile said.
Josh
Basile resumed taking courses at Montgomery College and the University
of Maryland after interning during the summer with Ben Cardin (D-Md.),
then a U.S. representative who has since won a seat on the U.S. Senate.
Returning to school has presented new challenges. “It’s
a totally different way of studying and learning,” said Basile.
“In class I have to work so much harder because I can’t
quickly right down notes.”
Basile uses scribes provided by
the college, or he gets notes from friends in his classes. The effects
of the difficulties and Basile’s hard work in school have yielded
different results from the last time he was in school.
“I’m
a straight-A student now, so that’s kind of weird,” said
Basile. While Josh was a good student before, said John Basile, he has
thrived academically with fewer distractions. Josh Basile said that he
enjoys school more now than he did before.
Basile said he will
begin taking classes at the University of Maryland next semester, with
the goal of graduating in hree years or less.
“Right now
I’m choosing a career and it’s not based on money,
I’m going to pursue something that will make me happy,”
Basile said. Right now Basile thinks he will minor in art major in
business, but he isn’t sweating the specifics at this point. With
the Determined2Heal Web site up and running and his organization
picking up steam, Basile is already doing exactly what he wants.
“To
tell you the truth,” Basile said, “I’m pretty much
dedicating my life to this. You can think of it as a business, but
it’s fun for me.”
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