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Adaptive scuba – the closest thing to flying

photo of two people in a swimming pool, one is wearing scuba gear
Minneapolis VA Physiatrist Alex Senk, MD, practices adaptive scuba with paralyzed Veteran Seth Thomas. Photo by Tonya Lobbestael.
By Tonya Lobbestael

Alexander Senk, MD, Acting Director, Spinal Cord Injury and Disorder, first came to the Minneapolis VA Health Care System as a physician resident where he worked on the spinal cord injury unit and the polytrauma center.

It’s also where, following his fellowship in sports medicine, this Olympic-class weightlifter found the opportunity to combine his passion for rehabilitation through adaptive sports, research, and teaching up and coming physiatrists to help their patients achieve their goals.

His first exposure to adaptive sports was volunteering at the Junior Disability Championships during his residency.

“I have a background in weightlifting and seeing people who were wheelchair users do power lifting and throw up big weight was just really inspiring,” said Senk. “It gave me a different appreciation of who they are, what they’re going through.”

Senk says adaptive sports are very challenging for the athletes, both physically and mentally, but the sense of camaraderie among fellow team members and competitors transcends the wheelchair.

Today, Senk treats Veterans participating in everything from adaptive rock climbing to adaptive scuba diving.

Veterans like Seth Thomas who broke his neck diving into a swimming pool while in the U.S. Navy. Following his injury and rehabilitation treatment through VA, Thomas became open water scuba certified, meaning he can dive as deep as 40 feet. But he needs to dive with a buddy, preferably one with medical training.

Senk, who always wanted to get scuba certified himself, now works with the Minneapolis VA, local Veteran service organizations, and the University of Minnesota as a buddy scuba diver.

“For someone like Seth who has more physical constraints...in the water, all of a sudden he’s free,” said Senk. “We have people get in the water and start doing flips and spins and they’re just so excited to be in there.”

Senk says sports and adaptive sports are especially important in the Veteran population because they are at a greater risk of obesity.

“If you look at our Veterans who also have a form of impairment, they are one and a half times more likely to be obese or overweight and that, unfortunately, means they are more likely to have other medical co-morbidities,” he explained. “So being able to offer them a way that they can actually be active and be in control of their own health is really important.”

Through his work with the National Veterans Wheelchair Games medical team and in his clinic at the Minneapolis VA, Senk sees first-hand the improved function of Veterans participating in adaptive sports. He also sees the joy in Veterans like Seth.

“You have some restrictions but, in the water, it feels like you don’t,” said Thomas as he and Senk prepared to enter the pool. “It’s the closest thing to flying you’ll ever get.”

VA salutes Dr. Senk, VA’s clinical educators and the more than 1,400 educational institutions that partner with VA to train future health professionals. These academic affiliations, some of which began more than 75 years ago, are coordinated by VA’s Office of Academic Affiliations (OAA). Find out more about VA’s academic mission by watching this video and visiting the Office of Academic Affiliations website.