The present invention relates generally to the field of wheelchairs, and more particularly, to a wheelchair that can also be used as a walker.
Current wheelchairs and walkers require the patient to switch between two pieces of equipment. As such, there is a need for a transitional medical device that would offer the functionality of both a wheelchair and a walker so that patients requiring the use of a wheelchair could work on developing or recovering their walking skills without leaving the wheelchair. A fear of falling often prevents individuals from attempting to use a walker. When individuals lose their mobility, they may become depressed as a result of their increased dependence on others. With a device that could be used both as a wheelchair and as a walker, more patients might be willing to attempt walking, which would improve their health and quality of life.
U.S. Pat. No. 3,584,890 (Presty, 1971) discloses a wheelchair with removable armrests that can be attached to the wheelchair frame in such a manner that the armrests act as extensible and removable supports that are engageable with the floor. In one embodiment, the supports include ground-engaging wheels, which allow the device to be used as a walker.
U.S. Pat. No. 3,719,390 (Haney, 1973) provides a wheelchair with a pivoting seat and an auxiliary frame that is coupled telescopically to the wheelchair main frame to allow the user to stand in an erect position. The auxiliary frame has a pair of vertically oriented legs that engage with the floor and that are connected by a lifting-bar. The purpose of the lifting-bar is to allow the operator to position the seat of the wheelchair relative to a toilet and hoist himself (with the use of the lifting-bar) into a standing position to gain access to the toilet.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,759,562 (Vinyard et al., 1988) discloses a kit for converting a wheelchair into a walker. The kit includes a seat for replacing the wheelchair bottom, a base for mounting the seat to the wheelchair, and an inverted U-shaped support bar. The support bar retains the patient between the sides of the wheelchair and seat.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,948,156 (Fortner, 1990) provides a frame that can be attached to a wheelchair to enable the user to move from a seated position in a wheelchair to a standing position without assistance from another person. The device incorporates a manually operated worm gear mechanism to facilitate lifting and prevent reverse movement of the lifting means when under load.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,320,122 (Jacobson, II et al., 1994) discloses a combined walker and wheelchair in which the seat assembly is slidably attached to the frame between a raised position and a lowered position. A spring causes the seat assembly to return to a raised position when weight is removed from the seat, and the seat pivotally returns to a lowered position when force (or weight) is applied to the seat. The frame assembly includes wheels that allow it to be moved along a floor surface. The chair is not self-propelled when the user is in the sitting position.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,419,571 (Vaughan, 1995) provides a collapsible wheelchair with a telescopically extending walker. In order to utilize the walker, the patient must push forward on the handrails and/or footrests to move each side of the walker forward until they are secured in an extended position. The patient would need assistance in order to convert the walker back into a wheelchair. The chair seat is configured so that it can be flipped up when not in use.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,451,193 (Pickard, 1995) discloses a combined wheelchair and walker with a braking device that is operatively associated with the seat. In a preferred embodiment, the brakes are not engaged with the wheels when the seat is in a raised position (walker mode). In an alternate embodiment, the brake is manually activated by the user whether the device is in wheelchair mode or walker mode.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,741,020 (Harroun, 1998) provides a collapsible combination chair-walker. The device includes a front rail and detachable safety strap. The chair has caster wheels but is not self-propelling (that is, it does not incorporate the larger rear wheels typically seen on a self-propelled wheelchair). The front rail is movable between a closed and locked position for normal operation and an open position for permitting ingress to and egress from the chair.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,338,493 (Wohlgemuth el al., 2002) discloses an apparatus that is convertible between a walker and a wheelchair. The rear pair of wheels is continuously engaged with the ground, and the front pair of wheels can be rotated upward (together with the footrests) to use the device as a walker. The seat also pivots upward when the device is in walker mode. The user cannot, however, simply stand up from the wheelchair seat into the walker; instead, the user would need to stand up without handrail assistance, turn around, and face in the other direction in order to use the walker. The user of this device could not simply sit down if he or she tired of walking.
U.S. Pat. No. 8,998,244 (Purdue, 2015) provides a wheelchair with a detachable walker. The walker is mechanically attached to the wheelchair by securing downwardly directed members into attachment sockets; according to the inventor, this procedure is performed by the caregiver (col. 2, lines 26-28). Presumably, a caregiver would be required to detach the walker from the wheelchair as well.
U.S. Patent Application Pub. No. 20110006494 (Walker) discloses a wheelchair with an extendable walker. The walker portion of the apparatus extends telescopically forward from the main wheelchair frame. As with Vaughan (referenced above), the user could not easily retract the walker back into the wheelchair without assistance. Furthermore, this device requires a mechanical conversion between wheelchair and walker modes, which the present invention does not.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a wheelchair that can also be used for walking with or without assistance. It is another object of the present invention to provide a wheelchair that is either self-propelled or that can be propelled by an aide. It is yet another object of the present invention to provide a wheelchair with safety features such as hand brakes, skids and safety straps to prevent falling and to alleviate the fear of falling. It is yet another object of the present invention to provide a wheelchair that can be disassembled for transport. Finally, it is an object of the present invention to provide a wheelchair that can be used as a walker without requiring the patient to stand up and physically convert the wheelchair into a walker.
The present invention is a combination wheelchair-walker device with a front and a back comprising: an upper frame; a lower frame comprised of two arc-shaped members, wherein each arch-shaped member is configured to extend from the front of the device to the back of the device, each of the two arc-shaped members having a front end and a rear end; two front wheels; two rear caster wheels, each of which is attached to the rear end of one of the two arc-shaped members; and two skids, each of which is attached to the front end of one of the two arc-shaped members. The invention preferably further comprises a seat frame, a seat pad, and a back pad.
In a preferred embodiment, the invention further comprises two footrests, each of which is attached to a footrest frame mount; wherein the footrest frame mount is comprised of a horizontal part and a vertical part joined together at a ninety-degree angle; and wherein the vertical part is attached to a wheel mount that is fixedly attached to one of the two front wheels. The invention preferably further comprises two push rails, each of which is spaced apart from and outwardly of one of the two front wheels; wherein each of the two front wheels comprises a front wheel frame; and wherein the push rail is connected to the front wheel frame of one of the two front wheels.
In a preferred embodiment, the invention further comprises a front push bar that is U-shaped; wherein each end of the U-shaped push bar terminates in a tube member; wherein each of the tube members fits telescopically into a front handlebar; and wherein the front handlebars extend forwardly from the upper frame. Preferably, the invention further comprises a fall restraint assembly; wherein the fall restraint assembly comprises a safety strap, two loop members that encircle the front push bar, a clasp and a buckle; wherein the safety strap is Y-shaped and extends from the two loop members to a central point where the safety strap continues as a single strap to the clasp; and wherein the buckle is located on an underside of the seat frame, and the claps fits into the buckle.
In a preferred embodiment, the upper frame is comprised of two rear vertical members that terminate in backwardly extending rear handlebars, two front support members with lower ends that constitute upper vertical telescoping tubes, two lower connection members to which the seat pad is attached, and two upper connecting members that connect the front support members to the rear vertical members; and wherein each of the front support members is comprised of an upper vertical telescoping tube portion, a front handlebar, and a straight central portion that joins the vertical telescoping tube portion and the front handlebar. Preferably, the invention further comprises two armrests that are situated on top of the upper connecting members. The invention preferably further comprises a rear push bar that is removably attached to a rear end of each of the two upper connecting members.
In a preferred embodiment, the invention further comprising two footrests, each of which is attached to a footrest frame mounts; wherein the footrest frame mount is comprised of a horizontal part and a vertical part joined together at a ninety-degree angle; wherein the vertical part of the footrest frame mount is attached to a wheel mount that is fixedly attached to one of the two front wheels; wherein the upper vertical telescoping tubes are configured to fit into the vertical part of the footrest frame mount; wherein the vertical part of the footrest frame mount is configured to form a receptacle for receiving the upper vertical telescoping tube; and wherein a lower vertical telescoping tube extends upwardly from a rear end of each of the two arc-shaped members and is configured to fit into a receptacle formed by a lower end of one of the two rear vertical members. Preferably, the invention further comprises a joinder bar that connects the two arc-shaped members; wherein each end of the joinder bar terminates in a vertical tube that is secured adjacent to the vertical part of the footrest frame mount.
In a preferred embodiment, the invention further comprises a brake assembly; wherein the brake assembly comprises a hand brake, a brake pad housing, a brake pad, and a brake cable. In another preferred embodiment, the upper frame is configured to be detached from the lower frame by unlocking four retention pins and lifting the upper frame off of the lower frame, two of the four retention pins being used to secure the upper vertical telescoping tubes into the vertical part of the footrest frame mounts, and the remaining two of the four retention pins being used to secure the lower vertical telescoping tubes into the receptacles formed by the lower ends of the rear vertical members.
When the chair is assembled, armrests 3 are situated on top of the upper connecting members 1f. A rear push bar 2 is removably attached to the rear end of the two upper connecting members 1f, as shown. A spring button 6 allows a person to remove the rear push bar 2 by depressing the spring button. Similarly, a spring button 6 allows the front push bar 8 to be detached from the front handlebars 2a. The front and rear handlebars 2a, 1a and the front and rear push bars 8, 2 are all preferably covered with a foam grip. The foam grips are shown in
As shown in this figure, when the chair is assembled, the upper vertical telescoping tubes 1b fit into the vertical part of the footrest frame mount 11c, which forms a receptacle for receiving the upper vertical telescoping tube 1b. Similarly, the lower vertical telescoping tubes 11.a extending from the rear of the lower frame 11 fit into receptacles formed by the lower ends of the rear vertical members 1c (see also
The length and arc of the lower frame 11 are configured so that when someone is sitting in the chair or when no one is sitting in the chair nor placing weight on the front push bar 8, all four wheels (the two front wheels 13 and the two rear caster wheels 12) are in contact with the ground, and the skids 15 are above the ground. As soon as weight is placed onto the front push bar 8, the chair tilts forward (around the central axis of the front wheels) so that the rear caster wheels 12 are above the ground and the skids 15 are in contact with the ground.
To put the brake assembly into a parking position, from the neutral position the user would push the hand brake 10 forward (away from the front support member 1d) until the hand brake audibly clicks, at which point the brake pad 10b would engage with the front wheel 13 (as shown in
Although the preferred embodiment of the present invention has been shown and described, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that many changes and modifications may be made without departing from the invention in its broader aspects. The appended claims are therefore intended to cover all such changes and modifications as fall within the true spirit and scope of the invention.
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Number | Date | Country |
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2004202264 | Jul 2004 | JP |