Low effort patient handling devices.

With an aging population there is a growing need to assist people with disabilities. Particularly crucial is assisting people who cannot stand between positions necessary for everyday living, such as from a wheelchair to the toilet. It is unsafe to transfer people with direct manual techniques, thus...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Waymouth, Andrew David
Language:en
Published: University of Canterbury. Mechanical 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10092/10093
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spelling ndltd-canterbury.ac.nz-oai-ir.canterbury.ac.nz-10092-100932015-03-30T15:29:53ZLow effort patient handling devices.Waymouth, Andrew DavidPatient Handlinglifterhoistdisabilitymobility aidWith an aging population there is a growing need to assist people with disabilities. Particularly crucial is assisting people who cannot stand between positions necessary for everyday living, such as from a wheelchair to the toilet. It is unsafe to transfer people with direct manual techniques, thus a patient handling device is required. To reduce the burden on the healthcare system it is beneficial for disabled people to be cared for in-home. Many in-home caregivers may be physically impaired, thus patient handling devices for this use must require as little effort as possible. This thesis found that existing manual patient handling devices contained significant weaknesses when used for in-home care and there is potential to improve upon them. Expert interviews, computer modelling and physical models were used to develop a novel patient handling device which addresses these identified weaknesses. A reduction in the number of operator tasks, operation time and operation force was achieved. A method of supporting the patient solely by their upper body is required by the novel patient handling device, though an acceptable way of incorporating this has yet to be achieved. Testing of an upper body enclosure support revealed that a person may be supported by their lower thorax without substantial clamping or physical effort from the patient. Such a support has potential to be developed into an acceptable solution. Further development and testing in variable conditions encountered during practical patient handling is required.University of Canterbury. Mechanical2015-02-01T23:30:52Z2015-02-01T23:30:52Z2014Electronic thesis or dissertationTexthttp://hdl.handle.net/10092/10093enNZCUCopyright Andrew David Waymouthhttp://library.canterbury.ac.nz/thesis/etheses_copyright.shtml
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Patient Handling
lifter
hoist
disability
mobility aid
spellingShingle Patient Handling
lifter
hoist
disability
mobility aid
Waymouth, Andrew David
Low effort patient handling devices.
description With an aging population there is a growing need to assist people with disabilities. Particularly crucial is assisting people who cannot stand between positions necessary for everyday living, such as from a wheelchair to the toilet. It is unsafe to transfer people with direct manual techniques, thus a patient handling device is required. To reduce the burden on the healthcare system it is beneficial for disabled people to be cared for in-home. Many in-home caregivers may be physically impaired, thus patient handling devices for this use must require as little effort as possible. This thesis found that existing manual patient handling devices contained significant weaknesses when used for in-home care and there is potential to improve upon them. Expert interviews, computer modelling and physical models were used to develop a novel patient handling device which addresses these identified weaknesses. A reduction in the number of operator tasks, operation time and operation force was achieved. A method of supporting the patient solely by their upper body is required by the novel patient handling device, though an acceptable way of incorporating this has yet to be achieved. Testing of an upper body enclosure support revealed that a person may be supported by their lower thorax without substantial clamping or physical effort from the patient. Such a support has potential to be developed into an acceptable solution. Further development and testing in variable conditions encountered during practical patient handling is required.
author Waymouth, Andrew David
author_facet Waymouth, Andrew David
author_sort Waymouth, Andrew David
title Low effort patient handling devices.
title_short Low effort patient handling devices.
title_full Low effort patient handling devices.
title_fullStr Low effort patient handling devices.
title_full_unstemmed Low effort patient handling devices.
title_sort low effort patient handling devices.
publisher University of Canterbury. Mechanical
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/10092/10093
work_keys_str_mv AT waymouthandrewdavid loweffortpatienthandlingdevices
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