David

David has systemic-onset juvenile idiopathic arthritis. He was 28 years old at the time of the interview and was the oldest to be interviewed. David was diagnosed in 1985. Most of the treatments discussed by other interviewees were not available to David when he was young. It is rare to see young people with arthritis who have medical histories as complicated as David's.
David works in local radio. He is white British.
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David spent a year in hospital. When he came home, he couldn't walk unaided or get up and down...
David spent a year in hospital. When he came home, he couldn't walk unaided or get up and down...
So that was in May 2010. I came home after a year, it was weird. I know it was, I mean it was a bit of an anticlimax in a way because you know it was very hard to adjust ‘cos I used to walk around my home, but now I can’t walk at all and spend all the time in the wheelchair, so I’ve now got to use my wheelchair in the house. The wheelchair never used to come into the house before so it’s a huge lifestyle change. You know not being able to get up and go and fetch the remote from the other side, or not getting up, do you know what I mean? It’s hard to adjust, you know the little things like that I couldn’t go upstairs to my room, had a stair lift all these years, to go upstairs I’ve never been able to do the stairs, I’m not you know the Bionic Man, but the stair lift had to go ‘cos I couldn’t get up there anymore so my room was put downstairs. Luckily I’ve got fantastic parents, you know, they're the best parents and they, well we, we applied for the grants from the local council to get an extension done, and we got that. We got a little bit of a grant but my Mum and Dad also funded a sort of side extension so I now live in there downstairs, I don’t go upstairs. We already had a downstairs bathroom anyway for a few years which was funded by my Mum and Dad again, wonderful.