HOME |  LOGIN |  ADVERTISE |  CONTACT
_











   
NEWSWIRE
Pride: Coming to a city near you
EXETER, Pa. - Pride Mobility Products has three more cities left on its whirlwind seminar tour. Attendees of the two-day seminars receive legislative updates, earn continuing education units (CEUs) and prepare for RESNA certification.

The tour enables "providers across the country to easily access the educational courses needed to maintain their RESNA-required certifications, and, equally important, knowledgeably recommend the most suitable products to accommodate the end users' mobility and pressure-management needs," said Ted Raquet, Pride's vice president of domestic sales, in a release.

STORY CONTINUES BELOW

Advertisement

When the tour comes to a close in October, Pride Mobility will have visited 28 cities. The remaining cities: Greensboro, N.C., on Sept. 18; Nashville, Tenn., on Sept. 23; and Atlanta on Oct. 24

At its most recent stop, at Pride's headquarters here, 160 attendees toured the company's manufacturing facility, and research and development and product testing departments.

"Pride Mobility's focus is on the continuous evolution of developing quality products that enable the end-user to achieve their mobility goals," said Scott Meuser, Pride's chairman and CEO, in a release.

Attendees at the Exeter seminar received a legislative update from Seth Johnson, vice president of government affairs, and a luncheon address by Bryan Anderson, an Iraqi-war veteran and spokesman for Quantum Rehab, a division of Pride.





HME Newswire 11.17.2008
HME remains a target under healthcare reform
CMS details anti-fraud program
Oxygen cap: Providers paint bleak picture of future
Philips Respironics to truckers: Sleep well, drive safe
Intel calls home
In brief: Scooter Store expands, AAHomecare celebrates


HME NEWS INFO CENTER
 
    

 The Golden Commode
Diabetes ruling leaves sour taste
Health care providers are supposed to help, not hinder, care and quality of life.



 Category Development
Manual wheelchairs remain viable
'Despite tight competition over price, the basic wheelchair continues to be the one most people encounter and use'















HOME       SUBSCRIBE       RESOURCES       ADVERTISE       CONTACT       PRIVACY POLICY      


© 2008 United Publications Inc.