Veterans with service-related injuries represent a population with some of the most complex adaptive equipment needs in the United States. Service injuries include combat-related limb loss (amputation rates in post-9/11 veterans significantly exceed those of previous conflicts due to blast injury survival), traumatic brain injury (TBI), spinal cord injury, burns, chronic musculoskeletal injuries from training and operational loads, and the combination of these in polytrauma. The VA healthcare system includes occupational therapy departments specifically focused on adaptive equipment and home modification for veterans, and the VA Prosthetics and Sensory Aids Service (PSAS) provides adaptive equipment as a benefit to eligible veterans.
Direct answer: Veterans eligible for VA healthcare can access adaptive equipment through the VA Prosthetics and Sensory Aids Service with a VA physician or OT prescription -- at no cost for service-connected conditions. For veterans not yet enrolled or waiting for VA access, purchasing adaptive tools directly (reacher grabbers, electric jar openers, kitchen aids) is appropriate. The GrabbersTool Reacher and Electric Jar Opener serve the same functional needs in the veteran population as in any other population with the same functional limitations.
Common Veteran Adaptive Equipment Needs by Injury Type
| Injury Type | Daily Function Impact | Key Adaptive Tools |
|---|---|---|
| Lower extremity amputation | Mobility via prosthesis or wheelchair; floor retrieval and dressing tasks | Reacher (43-inch for wheelchair users); long-handled dressing aids |
| Upper extremity amputation | Bilateral task limitation; grip and fine motor | Electric jar opener; one-handed cutting board; electric kitchen tools |
| TBI | Cognitive, fatigue, balance, and motor planning; varies widely | Simple-operation tools; consistent placement; caregiver-assisted setup as needed |
| Spinal cord injury | See SCI article; depends on level and completeness | Wheelchair; reacher; electric tools for hand-function limitation |
| Chronic musculoskeletal (back, knee, shoulder) | Pain with specific movements; fatigue | Reacher for bending limitation; electric tools for grip limitation |
VA Benefits for Adaptive Equipment
Veterans with service-connected disabilities may receive adaptive equipment through the VA at no cost. The process: enroll in VA healthcare, establish a primary care relationship, receive referral to VA OT, OT assesses needs and writes prescription, VA PSAS fulfills the equipment. The system can have wait times; direct purchase is appropriate while waiting or for veterans not eligible for VA care.
The GrabbersTool 32-inch Reacher and 43-inch Reacher are both suitable for veteran adaptive use. The Electric Jar Opener addresses grip and bilateral task limitations common in upper extremity injuries. Browse the full reacher collection.


