The present invention relates generally to an apparatus. More specifically, the present invention relates to an article storage caddy which is attached to a hospital bed side railing and relates to a storage caddy which can be quickly and easily installed to or removed from a patient hospital bed railing. The present invention allows convenient placement of small articles or necessities within the patient's reach and is capable of holding personal items in any position of the bed side railing.
For many years when a person has a medical condition which requires them to spend time in a hospital, skilled nursing facility, nursing home, convalescent facilities and the like, they frequently bring with them personal needed articles from home. There are only very few convenient places to put or store such items in a hospital room environment. When a small table next to the bed is provided, it is often cluttered with hospital food trays and other hospital related items which may be moved intentionally or unintentionally by any other hospital staff member at any time. Additionally, in today's hospital reality, a patient may move from one room to another with very short notice, in which case their personal belongings are liable to get misplaced during the move. Additionally, a person staying in the hospital may have items of personal value which they wish to have in close proximity to them. Although most hospitals have centrally located safes, there is no place for a patient confined to the bed to keep those articles safe and in immediate reach as they wish. In this situation usually the patient will use the nursing call light button, distract the CNA (certified nursing assistant), nurse or any other team member worker from doing other important medical duties which might be more crucial to the well being of other patients. Therefore, there has been a recognized need for many years, to provide convenient and safe bedside storage of those patient's necessities and amenities that is easy to reach or store while they are in the hospital.
For many years inventors and patients in the hospital have tried to come up with different solutions for this problem. Every generation has introduced different situations and conditions, using different type of beds and railings, different articles that appear as we move along with all the newer (and smaller) developed items. In recent years, our society uses certain items that have become not only convenient, but almost a necessity.
Today when a person has a medical problem which requires him or her to spend time in the hospital or a like, they frequently bring with them personal items such as cell phones, eye glasses, hearing aids, dentures, and the like. Today most of the patients have at least one of the above items, and most of the time more than one. These articles are a necessity for patients to be able to continue to function with their lives as normal as possible (to be able to chew and eat, hear, see, read and communicate with family, friends, doctors, and others). These things are not luxury items any more, but necessary for the daily activity of the patient. If any of these articles are lost during the patient's stay in the hospital, they can become very hard to replace in a timely manner. Any one of these items can easily cost a few hundred dollars to a few thousand dollars. If any of these articles are missing, this is going to be a devastating situation for the patient and the family.
The bed railing needs to have the ability to be at least in two positions: an up position when the patient lies down in the bed, and a down position when the patient gets in or out of the bed, or when the CNA or the nurse needs to change the linens or to have access to the upper body of the patient for a variety of needed treatments. When this happens, if all of the article caddy is inside the railing, close to the patient's reach as needed, it will be impossible to lower the rail in the way it was designed in the hospital beds today. None of the prior art have been able to address this issue.
It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide an improved patient article caddy for hospital beds of the type which is suspended from a patient bed railing. The present invention provides convenient and secured storage for miscellaneous articles that a patient might need to bring from home when admitted to the hospital. The ability of the article caddy to be in a position inside or outside of the hospital bed railing (depending on configuration of the railing) will address the main issues of safely storing the patient's articles at any position of the railing and the ability to move the railing to an up or down position without the article caddy being in the way or falling off the railing.
It is a further object of the present invention to provide an article caddy which is installed to the bed side railing in such a way that it does not slide away from the patient when the head end of the bed and the corresponding side railing of the hospital bed is raised.
It is a further object of the present invention to provide an article caddy which can easily be removed from one bed side railing and reinstalled on another bed side railing for easy transfer along with the patient and provide a low cost, disposable article caddy.
It is a further object of the present invention to provide an article caddy which can easily store articles such as cell phone, eyeglasses, or hearing aids, and allow the articles to be picked up with the use of only one hand.
For many years there has been a recognized need to provide convenient bedside storage of small necessities and amenities while people stay in the hospital. Over the years inventors have designed various solutions in response to new articles and specific needs. Over the years various trays, holders with clips, clamps or others have been designed to engage bed and bed railing, as disclosed in other US patents. These designs go back many years as far as Feb. 15, 1898 with U.S. Pat. No. 598,895 by Joseph Bell of Flora, Ind., which is especially designed for use in sick-rooms and to solve a problem for that time.
U.S. Pat. No. 1,841,264 from 1932 was developed to solve another problem that arose around that time. Other US patents followed over the years as disclosed in US patents numbers provided at the section related application. U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,431,154, 4,484,367, 4,504,992, 4,672,703, 4,954,561, 4,998,700, 5,365,623, U.S. Pat. No. 6,253,399 B1 all have tried to come up with solution for holding and storing different apparatuses as a nurse call device, electrical device, hospital telephone and a like. All of these attached to the bed side railing. Other patents were developed to address more specific needs of storing different belongings, small and big articles that a patient might have during the hospital stay as U.S. Pat. No. 5,651,152. Other U.S. Pat. No. 5,581,829, U.S. Pat. No. 6,292,963 B1, U.S. Pat. No. 6,848,132 B1 are not using the bed railing but the mattress or the sheets. The last group of patents, and more specifically U.S. Pat. No. Des. 420,510, U.S. Pat. No. D522,750S, U.S. Pat. No. 2,761,481, U.S. Pat. No. 3,967,666, and U.S. Pat. No. 5,370,246 came to address the patient's needs to store small articles that patients might bring from home, using a caddy attached to hospital bed railing.
As shown in the list above of other solutions, many inventors designed various solutions in response to specific needs. However, the prior art have certain drawbacks. Most of them, because of the attachment means, can be use only with certain types of bed railing. Almost no single device of the above caddies can be universally used with the various types of hospital bed railings. Part of the prior art patents as U.S. Pat. No. 5,651,152 lacked the ability to be easily removed and reinstalled to allow them to transfer with the patient from one unit to other and to fit on other types of bed railings, which happens many times in the hospital. Additionally, the cost of these holders is generally prohibitive for disposable usage. The bedside article storage caddy disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 2,761,481 (1954), U.S. Pat. No. 3,967,666 (1975), and U.S. Pat. No. 5,370,246 (1994) recognized and addressed some of the concerns with the previously discussed caddies. All of them still will have the problem to fit on as many types of hospital bed railings that are in the market today. They also do not address more specifically the patient's needs that have developed over the last 20 years or so. But the foremost important issue is that all of the patents that have designed over the years did not deal with or even mention one of the major problems that arise when using the bed railing as a support apparatus, which is the need for the article caddy to allow the bed railing to be switched between an up position and a down position.
All illustrations of the drawings are for the purpose of describing selected versions of the present invention and are not intended to limit the scope of the present invention.
The present invention is a storage apparatus designed for bedside use, such as in a hospital setting, nursing home, or any other situation as needed. For example, though the present invention is described as being used with the railing 6 on a hospital bed, the present invention may also be used with a railing 6 of a wheelchair or even a car. The present invention provides storage for a hospital patient and can be flipped about a bed railing 6, hanging on either the inside or outside of the bed depending on how the railing 6 is rotated. When a railing 6 is in a use (up) position, the present invention can hang on the inside of the railing 6 allowing a patient to access the present invention. When the railing 6 is in a down position, such as for allowing access to the bed, the present invention rotates about the railing 6 to be on the outside of the railing 6 such that the present invention is unobtrusively positioned. The present invention comprises a flexible panel 1, a rigid backplate 2, a first flexible strap 3, and a second flexible strap 4, as illustrated in
The flexible panel 1, shown in
The plurality of pockets 12, shown in
Allowing the present invention to be secured to a railing 6 are the first flexible strap 3 and the second flexible strap 4, visible in
The present invention provides convenient bedside storage, such as for hospital patients. Illustrations showing the present invention in use are provided in
In the present invention the flexible panel 1 and the rigid backplate 2 can be made from a variety of materials, as long as these materials are suitable to the function of the flexible panel 1 and a rigid backplate 2. Similarly, the first flexible strap 3 and the second flexible strap 4 can be made from any flexible material. The stud 53 is a made as an extrusion on the strap body 51, while the plurality of eyelets 52 is simply formed by cutting holes in the strap body 51. To reinforce the shape of the plurality of eyelets 52, each eyelet may be surrounded by a ring, with the ring providing structure to the eyelet 52. The pockets 12 are preferably rectangular in shape, and number four in total, though in other embodiments the number and shape may vary. The ideal embodiment of the present invention is washable, with the flexible panel 1, first flexible strap 3, second flexible strap 4, and rigid backplate 2 all being tolerant of soap and water.
In other embodiments, the first flexible strap 3 and the second flexible strap 4 utilize a different fastening method than that of the described preferred embodiment. Instead of using a stud 53 and plurality of eyelets 52, the straps may utilize other components that provide the same functionality. For example, the stud 53 may be replaced by hook-and-loop fasteners, a snap fastener, or a tongue. Correspondingly, the plurality of eyelets 52 may be replaced by hook-and-loop fasteners, snap fastener receptacles, or a buckle. Though these alternate embodiments replace the stud 53 and plurality of eyelets 52 from the preferred embodiment, they still allow the first flexible strap 3 and the second flexible strap 4 to secure to a railing 6, as required for the function of the present invention. As described earlier, in other embodiments additional straps may also be provided. These additional straps also comprise a strap body 51, a plurality of eyelets 52, and a stud 53, and can be attached to the first flexible strap 3 and second flexible strap 4 to extend the length of the straps. This works by engaging the studs 53 of the additional straps to one of the plurality of eyelets 52 of the first flexible strap 3 and second flexible strap 4.
Although the invention has been explained in relation to its preferred embodiment, it is to be understood that many other possible modifications and variations can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as hereinafter claimed.
The current application claims a priority to the U.S. Provisional Patent application Ser. No. 61/649,481 filed on May 21, 2012.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20130305451 A1 | Nov 2013 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61649481 | May 2012 | US |