<p>Cars, scooters and bicycles wait impatiently at traffic lights ready to zip across one of Shanghai's main roads. In the thick of them sits an old man in an electric wheelchair.</p>.<p>Nearby, another wheelchair user is pushed along in the street as traffic whizzes past just inches away.</p>.<p>Busy, narrow or clogged pavements — haphazard rows of rentable bikes are a prime offender — sometimes force people in wheelchairs to brave the busy downtown roads of China's biggest city.</p>.<p>Overpasses seemingly constructed with little regard for people with disabilities, uneven pavements, badly made ramps and patchy access to public transport can also make life difficult for "wheelers".</p>.<p>They say that the situation is even worse outside China's first-tier cities but is generally improving compared to just a few years ago.</p>.<p>Zhao Hongcheng is a video blogger who highlights the challenges she faces in Shanghai and other cities.</p>.<p>Now 31, she contracted polio as a baby and has been in a wheelchair since she was 11.</p>.<p>Wheelchair users in roads or bike lanes are an incongruous sight, but it is also noticeable how few people with disabilities are out in public.</p>.<p>"You rarely see them because, first of all, barrier-free travel is not perfect so it is difficult for people (in wheelchairs) to travel farther than two kilometres," said Zhao, whose videos can draw nearly 500,000 views.</p>.<p>"Secondly, wheelchair users still face difficulties getting into education and employment," added Zhao, who recently left her job working for a food delivery platform for reasons unrelated to her condition.</p>.<p>Information on the number of wheelchair users among China's 1.4 billion population is elusive.</p>.<p>But state-run media says there are 85 million disabled people and President Xi Jinping has called them "a group with special difficulties that require extra care and attention".</p>.<p>In 2019, Xi said that "no disabled person should be left behind".</p>.<p>Despite China's rapid and recent modernisation, attitudes towards people with disabilities and facilities for them have lagged.</p>.<p>Huang Yan, who is also in a wheelchair, says things are gradually changing.</p>.<p>"Ten years ago many people would look at people in wheelchairs as alien objects," said the 39-year-old, who works in e-commerce.</p>.<p>After a day out with other wheelchair users at a Shanghai park where cherry blossoms were in bloom, she related the tragic story of her friend Wen Jun.</p>.<p>He made headlines in 2019 when he plunged to his death in an underground car park while assessing wheelchair access in the southwestern city of Dali.</p>.<p>With a ramp for wheelchairs blocked by vehicles, Wen took a detour and could not see the sheer drop.</p>.<p>"He advocated barrier-free travel and was probably the first person to lead us disabled people out of the house and into society," said Huang.</p>.<p>"He didn't want us to be invisible any more."</p>.<p>Huang and Zhao, the video blogger, are not afraid to tell the authorities when they encounter a problem.</p>.<p>Sometimes issues such as blocked wheelchair exits or inaccessible public toilets get fixed. Sometimes not. Most often they just overcome the obstacle with their own determination.</p>.<p>They say that while some elderly people often take to Shanghai's busy roads in wheelchairs, it is not generally necessary and definitely not safe.</p>.<p>Zhao knows first-hand: a car struck her from behind while in her wheelchair on a road in the nearby city of Hangzhou. Fortunately she was not badly hurt.</p>.<p>Old attitudes have sometimes proved hard to shift.</p>.<p>Zhao receives online messages from fellow wheelchair users who tell her of their problems, including universities revoking admission after realising they are disabled.</p>.<p>"I think it's really heartbreaking," she said.</p>.<p>Zhao, who bucked the trend with a Masters degree, also says that too often she faces the humiliation of being asked by strangers why she is in a wheelchair.</p>.<p>"Many people think that the disabled live on an island and are completely disconnected from the masses," she said.</p>.<p>"In fact, we are integrated in society and it is very likely that you will see us.</p>.<p>"If we really get to know each other, you will find that we have a lot in common."</p>
<p>Cars, scooters and bicycles wait impatiently at traffic lights ready to zip across one of Shanghai's main roads. In the thick of them sits an old man in an electric wheelchair.</p>.<p>Nearby, another wheelchair user is pushed along in the street as traffic whizzes past just inches away.</p>.<p>Busy, narrow or clogged pavements — haphazard rows of rentable bikes are a prime offender — sometimes force people in wheelchairs to brave the busy downtown roads of China's biggest city.</p>.<p>Overpasses seemingly constructed with little regard for people with disabilities, uneven pavements, badly made ramps and patchy access to public transport can also make life difficult for "wheelers".</p>.<p>They say that the situation is even worse outside China's first-tier cities but is generally improving compared to just a few years ago.</p>.<p>Zhao Hongcheng is a video blogger who highlights the challenges she faces in Shanghai and other cities.</p>.<p>Now 31, she contracted polio as a baby and has been in a wheelchair since she was 11.</p>.<p>Wheelchair users in roads or bike lanes are an incongruous sight, but it is also noticeable how few people with disabilities are out in public.</p>.<p>"You rarely see them because, first of all, barrier-free travel is not perfect so it is difficult for people (in wheelchairs) to travel farther than two kilometres," said Zhao, whose videos can draw nearly 500,000 views.</p>.<p>"Secondly, wheelchair users still face difficulties getting into education and employment," added Zhao, who recently left her job working for a food delivery platform for reasons unrelated to her condition.</p>.<p>Information on the number of wheelchair users among China's 1.4 billion population is elusive.</p>.<p>But state-run media says there are 85 million disabled people and President Xi Jinping has called them "a group with special difficulties that require extra care and attention".</p>.<p>In 2019, Xi said that "no disabled person should be left behind".</p>.<p>Despite China's rapid and recent modernisation, attitudes towards people with disabilities and facilities for them have lagged.</p>.<p>Huang Yan, who is also in a wheelchair, says things are gradually changing.</p>.<p>"Ten years ago many people would look at people in wheelchairs as alien objects," said the 39-year-old, who works in e-commerce.</p>.<p>After a day out with other wheelchair users at a Shanghai park where cherry blossoms were in bloom, she related the tragic story of her friend Wen Jun.</p>.<p>He made headlines in 2019 when he plunged to his death in an underground car park while assessing wheelchair access in the southwestern city of Dali.</p>.<p>With a ramp for wheelchairs blocked by vehicles, Wen took a detour and could not see the sheer drop.</p>.<p>"He advocated barrier-free travel and was probably the first person to lead us disabled people out of the house and into society," said Huang.</p>.<p>"He didn't want us to be invisible any more."</p>.<p>Huang and Zhao, the video blogger, are not afraid to tell the authorities when they encounter a problem.</p>.<p>Sometimes issues such as blocked wheelchair exits or inaccessible public toilets get fixed. Sometimes not. Most often they just overcome the obstacle with their own determination.</p>.<p>They say that while some elderly people often take to Shanghai's busy roads in wheelchairs, it is not generally necessary and definitely not safe.</p>.<p>Zhao knows first-hand: a car struck her from behind while in her wheelchair on a road in the nearby city of Hangzhou. Fortunately she was not badly hurt.</p>.<p>Old attitudes have sometimes proved hard to shift.</p>.<p>Zhao receives online messages from fellow wheelchair users who tell her of their problems, including universities revoking admission after realising they are disabled.</p>.<p>"I think it's really heartbreaking," she said.</p>.<p>Zhao, who bucked the trend with a Masters degree, also says that too often she faces the humiliation of being asked by strangers why she is in a wheelchair.</p>.<p>"Many people think that the disabled live on an island and are completely disconnected from the masses," she said.</p>.<p>"In fact, we are integrated in society and it is very likely that you will see us.</p>.<p>"If we really get to know each other, you will find that we have a lot in common."</p>