Not Applicable
Not Applicable
This invention relates to door privacy screens and, more particularly, to screens for blocking lines of sight through the gap formed between a door jamb and a hinged-end of a door as the door is closed or opened, or at any position in between.
In many environments, it is desirable to prevent persons from viewing the inside of a room through the gap formed between the hinged-end of a door and its door jamb. Occasionally, some doors are designed such that there is a small crack, or space, which allows for visibility through the hinge gap (or alternatively called a cavity or rabbet), between the hinged-end of a door and its door jamb even when a door is in a substantially closed position. However, it is more often the case that a gap between the hinged end of a door and its door jamb is created and becomes wider as a door is moved to an increasingly open position.
An environment where privacy is of concern is that of the hospital or medical office setting. To this effect, many examination rooms are built with doors that are located near one of the extreme ends of the examination room and have their hinged end on the side of a door nearest the middle of the room. With this arrangement, the door opens to a view of the side wall of the examination room. Thus, in an attempt to retain privacy as a door is opened to allow the health care provider to enter or leave, the patient and examination furniture and tools are located behind the door.
Occasionally the examination room door is not fully closed while the patient is in the room preparing for an exam, allowing passers-by looking at the edge of a door with the door handle only a partial view of the inside of the examination room side wall. Nonetheless, even with this door placement, a visual line of sight into the examining room through the gap between the hinged-end of a door and its door jamb is provided at any point that the door is in the ajar position. The visibility through this gap providing a line of sight inside to passers-by can cause a breach of privacy, possibly cause an infraction of privacy laws, and additionally cause the patient to feel embarrassed or uncomfortable, which often hampers the effectiveness of their examination and treatment.
In addition to health care, other settings in which obscuring the gap providing a line of sight into an area created at the hinged-end edge of a door and its door jamb as the door is opened include business offices, restrooms and bathroom stalls, bedrooms, conference rooms and any other settings where privacy is desired. Consequently, the need for inhibiting the ability to see what is on the other side of the door at the junction of the hinged-end edge of a door and its door jamb is substantial.
Previous devices which incidentally can cover the line of sight through the hinge gap area have been in use for years. Although most are aimed at the prevention of fingers being accidently pinched in the hinge gap area, unlike this invention, these designs do not have the ease of use and installation, cost effectiveness as well as being substantially unobtrusive by being mostly contained in the hinge gap cavity virtually out of sight when a door is closed.
These previous products have been complicated, as in the design of U.S. Pat. No. 4,878,267, expensive as in the design of U.S. Pat. No. 4,040,142, or both as seen in U.S. Pat. No. 6,141,909. Among devices that are meant to be applied to existing door systems, such as U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,845,892 and 9,803,419 B2, many involve significant alterations to door jambs and doors, or destruction of the doors' decorative finish which could result in a door needing replacement if the device is removed. As a result, there has been a long-felt need for a simple, inexpensive flexible door privacy screen that can easily be applied to existing door systems. This present invention is directed to satisfying this need.
The foregoing and other features and advantages of the present invention will become more easily appreciated as the same becomes better understood by reference to the following drawings and a detailed description of the preferred embodiment of the invention wherein:
In accordance with the invention, a flexible door privacy screen for blocking most lines of sight through the gap formed between the hinged-end edge of a door and its door jamb is disclosed. The flexible door privacy screen includes a pleated material that is affixed to the hinged-end edge of a door and its facing area on its door jamb that is somewhat parallel when a door is closed. This configuration allows for the flexible door privacy screen the minimum protrusion possible outside the space comprised of the gap between the hinged-end edge of a closed door and its door jamb. This gap can also be described as a hinge gap, cavity or rabbet. The flexible door privacy screen is folded, or extruded, in a concertinaed pattern, or accordion pleat, which allows the privacy screen to change its shape, or have its pleats move to allow the screen's overall width to increase, much like a moving bellows, as the door is opened while still retaining the function of blocking most lines of sight into a room on the other side of the door. Conversely, as a door is closed the concertinaed, accordion pleat shape allows the folds to come together one on another allowing for many articulations without damage to the flexible door privacy screen. With this configuration the flexible door privacy screen achieves the desired result which is to block most lines of sight through the gap between the hinged-end edge of a door and its door jamb while the door is in its closed, or open positions, and while the door is moved between the open or closed positions. In accordance with other aspects of this invention the flexible door privacy screen is adhered to the hinged-end edge surface of a door and the surface of its door jamb that is somewhat parallel to the hinged-end edge when a door is closed, respectively through the use of double-sided tape affixed on the outermost surfaces of the flexible door privacy screen, or by using some other fastening device.
Provisional patent application No. 62/922,695; Filing Date Aug. 23, 2019
Number | Date | Country | |
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62922695 | Aug 2019 | US |