When the USA Para Powerlifting (USAPP) program faced a rough transition in 2016, Logan University, a small health science institution in Chesterfield, Missouri, stepped in to help.
To deepen that commitment, Logan created a Paralympics Operations department, which is dedicated to supporting adaptive sports. In 2021, the department received a $25,000 Christopher & Dana Reeve Foundation Quality of Life grant to help expand the grassroots and development operations for para powerlifting.
With grant funding, the program added to its Regional Hub Initiative, a network of adaptive sports organizations affiliated with USAPP. The initiative’s goal is to increase access to the sport so individuals living with paralysis can build the upper body strength required for independent living, participate in physical activity and healthy living, and engage with social and emotional support networks in the para powerlifting community.
“A lot of athletes who participate in Paralympic-style powerlifting live with a spinal cord injury,” says Dr. Humphries-Mascoll. “Like most adaptive sports, specialized equipment can be expensive. When athletes can use an adaptive bench in a local gym, they have more access to participate in the sport.”
The grant funded the addition of ten new hubs in local gyms and disability centers across the country to the current 11 hubs in eight states. Many hubs are individually owned, free-standing gyms, which create a truly inclusive environment for athletes.
Hub locations were chosen by local interest with a focus on where current para powerlifting athletes live. Locations funded by the grant include Endeavor Games (Edmod, Oklahoma), Lonestar Para-Athletic Development Academy (San Antonio, Texas), Morgan's Wonderland (San Antonio, Texas), Move United (Rockville, Maryland), Peak Sports Performance (Overland Park, Kansas), Rochester Performance Gym (Rochester Hills, Michigan), Samaritan's Walk (Richmond, Virginia), Sutherlin Fitness and Athletic Performance (Rosemount, Minnesota), The Center for Individual's with Physical Challenges (Tulsa, Oklahoma) and The Training Hall by Odd E. Haugen (Newbury Park, California).
“There are a lot of local gym owners who honestly don’t realize how easy it is to be an inclusive space,” says Humphries-Mascoll. “It just takes some meaningful consideration — especially if you have the support of an organization like Logan that’s willing to assist in getting the equipment and training your staff. It opens so many possibilities, and barriers can be removed, physical and invisible barriers.”
“It is so important for athletes to use the equipment in a safe manner,” says Humphries-Mascoll. “And if an athlete falls in love with the sport, they can train at a high level and advance their dreams of completing domestically and internationally.”
While it’s difficult to track the exact number of times the equipment is used, the hubs have serviced over 75 people who self-reported to be living with paralysis, as well as 80 caregivers and family members. Approximately 78% of participants surveyed strongly agreed to feel more confident in their abilities to participate in the sport after participating in a regional hub event. All of the regional hub participants strongly agreed to feeling comfortable training to participate in the sport, and 89% strongly agreed that they felt the event improved their overall self-esteem.