How to make your tele-rehabilitation session a success
With the quarantine days due to the COVID-19 emergency, the need to maintain a routine and continuity for therapeutic treatments in families with people with disabilities also increases. In a strange rhythm of life, in which dreams overlap with the concreteness of domestic life, our future plans are in a limbo, the lives of our children have moved online and, as parents of children with disabilities, suddenly we have found to be our son's teachers, nurses, therapists and sports coaches,on top of our usual role of 'caregiver', the management of a super-crowded house and the work we normally do to live. Ours was already a life outside the normal canons, even without a global pandemic: to say that we are stressed would not make the sense of what many families are experiencing these days, living so close under one single roof.