Ready for Spring! Get Your High Backed Swing Seats
Swinging, jumping, spinning and rocking are important to children not only for fun and exercise but also to help their bodies organize and to regulate their sensory systems. And now with spring time here, you can finally get outside to take in a favorite activity.
Our high-backed swing seat has been providing a supported ride to generations. It has been much copied, but never bettered. Our Full Support Swing Seats offer an inch more room all around, we designed it that way and we are sure that you will appreciate the difference. Our swing seats incorporate a pommel and a safety harness with snap buckles.
Available in three sizes from child to adult, everyone will be able to enjoy spring swinging.
Please send us any comments, concerns or any questions you may have on our new site by emailing us at sales@especialneeds.com
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Swing Therapy and Sensory Integration for Special Needs Children
Swinging, jumping, spinning and rocking are important to children not only for fun and exercise but also to help their bodies organize and to regulate their sensory systems. Vestibular input is one of the core elements of sensory integration therapy. Our bodies' vestibular system is the sensory system that provides the primary input about movement, balance, spatial awareness and positioning. It helps us prepare our posture, maintain our balance, properly use our vision, calm ourselves and regulate our behavior.
The amount of vestibular input varies depending on the child. Some children crave movement, while others may be motion sensitive. It is important that the sensory needs of the child being monitored to determined what is right for them. Some children may start to “stim” after a point and can become more aggressive or hyperactive offsetting any calming effect the swing may have had on the child. Controlled vestibular input under the direction of an occupational or physical therapist is recommended for children with sensory processing issues.
Movement is essential for typical development to occur in all children. Swinging can have a powerful impact the brain’s ability to process and use sensory information. Whether the child is linear swinging on a strap swing, cuddled up in a net swing for proprioceptive input or spinning in a rotating movement, all of these movements can act as a powerful activator on the body’s systems. Swings and a variety of other sensory input are used in this type of therapy.
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eSpecial Needs LLC., 11724 Lackland Industrial Drive, St. Louis, MO 63146 3146922424
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