The present invention relates to an infant warming apparatus and, more particularly, to an apparatus for providing the functions of an infant incubator and an infant warmer and which includes a convective heating system and a separately controlled overhead fixed radiant heater.
There are, of course, many devices or apparatus for the warming of an infant and to supply the necessary heat to maintain the infant at a predetermined temperature. Of the various apparatus, there are infant warmers that are basically planar surfaces on which the infant is positioned and which planar surfaces generally include side guards to keep the infant safely within the confines of the apparatus.
Infant warmers normally have an overhead radiant heater that is located above the infant and which thus radiates energy in the infrared spectrum to impinge upon the infant to maintain the infant at a warm, desired temperature. Since the infant is otherwise totally exposed to the surroundings, there is almost unlimited access to the infant by the attending personnel to perform various procedures on that infant. An example of an infant warmer is shown and described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,474,517 of Falk et al as prior art to that patent.
There are also infant incubators and which are more confined enclosures that contain the infant within an enclosed controlled atmosphere in an infant compartment that provides heat to the infant and also may provide control of humidity in the enclosed environment. Such incubators maintain the infant for long periods of time and include handholes to access the infant. Generally, there is, in addition, one or more doors that can be opened to access the infant or to insert or remove the infant to and from the incubator. Such devices provide a good atmosphere to the infant and control that local environment within which the infant is located, however, it is sometime difficult to perform a wide variety of procedures on the infant due to the somewhat limited access to that infant. An example of an infant incubator is shown and described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,936,824 of Koch et al.
At the present, there are also certain infant care apparatus that have both of the aforedescribed functions, that is, the apparatus can operate either as a radiant warmer or an incubator and one such apparatus is shown and described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,213,935 and entitled “Infant Warming Apparatus” of Mackin et al and assigned to the assignee of the present application. In the Mackin et al patent, the apparatus has a canopy with a radiant heater and the canopy and radiant heater can be moved between an upper position where the radiant heater directs the energy in the infrared spectrum towards the infant to provide heat to the infant and a lower position where the radiant heater is disabled and a convective heating system is provided in the infant apparatus to heat the infant now enclosed within an infant compartment and covered by the canopy.
An infant apparatus is also shown and described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,224,539 of Jones et al, and assigned to the assignee of the present application. In the Jones et al patent, there is canopy having a radiant heater positioned over an infant support and, again the canopy and the radiant heater can be raised and lowered between upper and lower positions where the radiant heater is energized when in the upper position and the convective system provides the heat to the infant when the canopy and radiant heater are in the lower position. There are also a set of doors in the Jones et al patent that are opened and closed to allow the heater to radiate outwardly and to enclose the heater in a protective environment when the radiant heater has been inactivated.
Thus, in the operation of the Jones et al apparatus, as the canopy and heater descend toward the infant in converting the apparatus from a radiant warmer function to an incubator function, the doors are automatically closed to retain the heater in that protective environment and, conversely, as the canopy and the radiant heater are again raised to convert from an incubator function to an infant warmer function, the doors are automatically opened so that the radiant energy can emanate from the heater, when energized, toward the infant resting on the infant platform.
There has also been disclosed another infant apparatus that utilizes both the functions of an infant incubator and an infant warmer and is described in a printed publication of Dragerwerk AG in 1991, where an apparatus is disclosed having a hood that can be raised and lowered. When the hood of that publication is lifted to an open position with respect to the infant platform to afford access to the infant, a radiant heater in the configuration of a horseshoe shape can be energized.
Finally, in U.S. Pat. No. 4,750,474 of Dukham et al, there also is described an infant apparatus that utilizes a convective heater system generally located beneath the infant platform and which is energized when the apparatus is closed and is operating as an incubator. There is a canopy that can be opened by rotating two canopy halves downwardly to open up the infant compartment and a radiant heater can then supply radiant energy onto the infant.
Accordingly, it would be advantageous to have an infant apparatus that selectively incorporates the better features of the aforementioned differing apparatus by having a fixed heater that is positioned above the infant platform on which the infant rests to direct radiant energy toward the infant when the apparatus is functioning as an infant warmer while also have a movable canopy that can move between a closed position where it encloses and forms an infant compartment warmed by a convective heating system and an upper position where the caregiver has complete access to the infant and the apparatus is operating in the infant warmer function.
It would also be advantageous in such infant apparatus that there be some means to transmit the radiant energy efficiently from the radiant heater despite the presence of the canopy that is movable over the infant platform without having the canopy impede the transmission of the radiant energy from the radiant heater to the infant.
Accordingly, the present invention relates to an infant care apparatus that has an overhead canopy that can be raised and lowered by the user with respect to an infant platform between an upper and a lower position. In the lower position the canopy interacts with the infant platform to contain the infant beneath the canopy and a convective heating system can be employed to provide heat to the infant while, in the upper position, the infant is fully accessible and can be attended to by the caregiver.
A radiant heater is located in a fixed position above the infant platform and is situated so as to direct the infrared radiation along a path to impinge that infrared radiation on to the infant platform. The canopy has an opening therein, generally centrally located in the canopy, and which opening is positioned and dimensioned so as to allow the infrared energy to continue along the path to the infant support when the canopy is in its upper position.
In the preferred embodiment, there is at least one door located in the upper portion of the canopy and which door can be moved between a closed position where the door blocks the opening and an open position where the opening is not blocked. The door is in its closed position when the canopy is in its lower position and the door is open when the canopy is in its upper position. Thus, the canopy can be used to contain the infant within an infant compartment and be vertically movable between and upper position and a lower position, however when the canopy is in its upper position, the radiant heater can be energized wherein the presence of the canopy does not impede the transmission of the infrared energy from the radiant heater directly toward the infant.
The door can be biased toward its closed position or its open position depending upon the particular embodiment, that is, when the door is biased toward its open position, the door is closed against that bias as it reaches its lower position whereupon when the door is biased toward its closed position, the door is opened against that bias as it moves upwardly toward its upper position.
In either instance the opening or closing of the door is carried out by the canopy moving with respect to a fixed structural component such that there is an interaction between that fixed structural component that physically contacts the door or a component affixed to the door and the relative motion of the canopy causes the door to move to the desired position countering the bias.
Thus, one means of opening the door is to have the canopy, as it travels in the upward direction, to encounter and abut against the fixed component. As such, the further travel of the canopy in the upward direction causes the fixed component to push downwardly on the door and move it against the bias to the open position.
Similarly, another means of opening the door is to have the canopy, as it travels in the downward direction, to encounter a fixed structural component. As the canopy travels further downwardly, that fixed component acts against a bracket or other extension affixed to the door and the further movement of the canopy in the downward direction pushes the door to its closed position.
In carrying out the present invention, there is a base with a vertical frame member extending upwardly from the base and an infant platform mounted to the vertical frame member above the base. The upper surface of the infant platform is a flat, planar surface that is adapted to underlie and support an infant being cared for in the use of the apparatus. Extending upwardly from the infant platform are walls of a transparent material and the vertically movable canopy is movable between a lower position where it mates with the upper edges of the walls to form therein an infant compartment and an upper position where the flat planar surface of the infant platform is generally open to the ambient atmosphere for full access to an infant supported by the infant platform.
The radiant heater is mounted between a pair of vertical frame members such that the radiant heater is generally located above the head of an infant positioned on the infant support and the radiant energy from the radiant heater is emitted toward the infant to provide warmth to the infant when the canopy is in its upper position. A convective heating system is also provided to supply heated air to the infant compartment for warming the infant contained therein when the canopy is in its lower position. In the preferred embodiment, the convective heating system is contained within the infant support underneath the flat, planar surface supporting the infant. The convective heat system includes a heater, a fan and the various ducting and passageways used to convey the air to and from the infant compartment.
A lifting system is provided to raise and lower the canopy between the upper and lower positions. The lifting system can be the system shown and described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,231,499 of Thomas C. Jones and entitled “Lift Mechanism For Infant Apparatus Canopy” and in that patent the lifting system is used to provide vertical movement to both a radiant heater and a canopy. A control system is also utilized such that the convective heating system is activated when the canopy is in its lower position and the radiant heater is disabled and, conversely, when the canopy is in its upper position, the radiant heater is activated and the convective heating system is disabled and such control system is shown and described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,213,935 of Mackin et al and entitled “Infant Warming System” and the disclosures of both of the aforementioned U.S. patents are hereby incorporated herein by reference. Alternatively, there could be a control system where the radiant heater is left on when the infant care apparatus is acting as an incubator or the convective heating system remain on when the infant care apparatus is acting as a radiant warmer.
These and other features and advantages of the present invention will become more readily apparent during the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the drawings herein.
Referring now to
As shown, the infant warming apparatus 10 includes an infant support 14 that underlies and supports an infant. As is also seen, a plurality of walls 16 are provided to contain the infant safely within the infant warming apparatus 10 and are located at all of the four sides of the infant support 14. The walls 16 are preferable constructed of transparent plastic material and, as will be explained, cooperate with other components in order to provide an incubator function to the infant warming apparatus 10 when in the
The convective heating system that can be used with the present invention can be a well known and commercially used forced air convective system and one such system that can be used is shown and described in the aforementioned U.S. Pat. No. 6,213,936 of Mackin et al and the necessary apparatus for the convection heating system, such as the heater, fan, humidity control, air ducts and the like are normally located within the infant support 14. That convective heating system then circulates the heated air through the infant compartment that is formed when the present canopy 12 is in its lower position and the infant warming apparatus 10 is carrying out the function of an incubator.
The infant support 14 is mounted to a vertical base member 18 which, in the preferred embodiment, is movably affixed to a stationary vertical base member (not shown), which, in turn, is mounted to a base 20 having wheels 22 for ready movement of the infant warming apparatus 10.
The vertical base member 18 is preferably mounted so that the user can adjust the height of the infant support 14 by raising and lowering the vertical base member 18 as desired, thus the infant support 14 can be adjusted to the preferred height by the user. As further standard features, the walls 16 have handholes 24 to afford access to the infant when in the incubator configuration of
Another convenient feature includes a drawer 28 to retain supplies or other devices needed to carry out some operation on the infant and which is normally located beneath the infant support 14. Other features include the maneuverability of the walls 16 that are pivotally mounted at their bases to the infant support 14 such that the doors can be swung outwardly and downwardly and, as a further alternative, can be easily fully removed from the infant support 14. As such, therefore, when the canopy 12 of the infant warming apparatus 10 is in its lower position as shown in
Further structural components of the infant warming apparatus 10 include vertical frame members 30 that are affixed to the base member 18 and, as shown, there are two vertical frame members 30 in the preferred embodiment although there may be only one or there may be further numbers of such members.
A control module 32 is conveniently positioned intermediate the vertical frame members 30 and may include displays of various monitored parameters as well as include the various controls for operation of the functions of the infant warming apparatus 10.
A radiant heater 34 is located atop of the vertical frame members 30 and is held there in a fixed position with respect to the infant support 14 so that the radiant heater 34 can always be focused so as to direct the infrared energy toward an infant that is located on the infant support 14. Finally, with respect to
Turning now to
As may now be seen in general, the canopy 12 can be moved between its lower position as shown in
As also can be seen in
Accordingly, the canopy 12 can be located in its upper position thereby allowing unlimited access to the infant to perform interventions on the infant, and yet the radiant heater 36 can serve its purpose of providing heat to the infant resting on the infant support 14. By the specific location and dimensions of the opening 36, the canopy 12 can be raised vertically with respect to the infant support 14, in converting the apparatus from an infant incubator to an infant warmer function yet the radiant heater 34 can remain fixed since the opening 36 in the canopy 12 allows the radiation from that radiant heater 34 to actually pass through the canopy 12.
As a further feature of the infant warming apparatus 10, in the preferred embodiment, there is a blocking member, preferably at least one door, and more preferably two doors 38 that are located intermediate the radiant heater 34 and the infant support 14. As shown in
In
As also can be noted in
Preferably the angle of the doors 38 is sufficiently steep to cause such items to slide away for the center of the canopy 12 and that angle can be from about 20 degrees to about 50 degrees with respect to a horizontal plane and the angle is indicated on
Thus, the present invention allows the use of a fixed overhead radiant heater 34 that can provide radiant energy to the infant when the infant care apparatus is acting as an infant warmer and yet have the advantage of an incubator by closing the opening 36 by the doors 38 to provide a protective environment when the infant care apparatus 10 is acting as an incubator.
In
The curved bar 48 is a preferred and convenient component, however, it can be seen that any fixed component of the housing 50 or even a fixed member projecting out from one of both of the vertical frame members 30 can be used to encounter the upper surface of the doors 38, it only being of importance that the fixed component be fixed in position with respect to the infant support 14 so as to encounter the doors 38 of the vertically upwardly moving canopy 12. Other methods could, of course, be used to open and close the doors 38.
Accordingly, turning now to
In
In
While the use of the upper edge 52 of the rear wall 16 is preferred, it can be seen that other devices, such as a projection extending inwardly from the rear wall 16 could be used to engage the lower surface of the door 38 to prevent the doors 38 from opening downwardly when the canopy 12 is in the lower position. Accordingly, if some object is inadvertently placed on the sloped surface of the doors 38 when the canopy is in its lower position and the object does not slide off the doors 38 by the downward slope angle of the doors 38, the locking means of the doors 38 abutting against the wall 16, or by the use of a projection prevents the weight of the object to cause the doors 38 to open and allow the object to fall into the infant compartment.
Turning now to
Therefore, the infant warming apparatus 54 of
As with the prior embodiment, there is a canopy 64 located above the base 58 and which, in its lower position illustrated in
The door 56 is biased toward the open position, thus away from the position shown in
A pin 72 extends vertically downward from the canopy 64 and that pin 72 is affixed to the bracket 70 through a linkage 74. Basically, the pin 72 is located and mounted in a vertically oriented channel formed in the canopy 64 such that the pin 72 can move along a vertically path so as to move the linkage 74 and, as will be seen, also move the door 56 about its pivot point 66. In short, the vertical movement of the pin 72 causes the door 56 to rotate about the pivot point 66.
The mechanism for the movement of that door 56 is best illustrated in
In addition, as seen in
Therefore, as the canopy 64 continues to move downwardly, the pin 72, now blocked against such the downward movement, basically pushes vertically upwardly to act on the linkage 74 to move that linkage 74 upwardly along with the bracket 70 to move the door 56 to its closed position, as shown, against the bias exerted by the spring 68. The position of the pin 72 is, therefore, in its vertically uppermost position in
As also can be seen in the schematic view of
Turning now to
Taking
The mechanism is more clearly shown in
Finally, turning to
As such, the spring 68 has exerted a bias against the bracket 70 and the linkage 74 to pull those component downwardly as shown by the arrow B and which, in turn, moves the door to its open position represented by the arrow C. Thus, as the canopy 64 of
Turning then to
Accordingly, as the canopy 64 is moved to its lower position, wherein the infant warming apparatus 54 functions as an incubator, the door 56 or doors will automatically close by the result of the pin 72 moving with the canopy 64 and encountering a fixed component, that of the closing block 78 such the further downward movement of the canopy 64, in effect, causes the pin 72 to move upwardly with respect to the canopy 64 to move the door 56 to the closed position against the bias of spring 68.
As a further feature, in the case where the doors overlap, or for some other reason, it is desirable for the doors to be sequenced or staggered in arriving at their closed positions, the doors 56 can be sequenced closed simply by determining the length of the pin 72 that is actuating one of the doors, that is, the pin actuating one of the doors can be made shorter or longer than the other pin actuating the other door so that the ultimate closing of the respective doors can be staggered with respect to each other.
Those skilled in the art will readily recognize numerous adaptations and modifications which can be made to the infant care apparatus of the present invention which will result in an improved system, yet all of which will fall within the scope and spirit of the present invention as defined in the following claims. Accordingly, the invention is to be limited only by the following claims and their equivalents.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3858570 | Beld et al. | Jan 1975 | A |
4750474 | Dukhan et al. | Jun 1988 | A |
4936824 | Koch et al. | Jun 1990 | A |
5474517 | Falk et al. | Dec 1995 | A |
6022310 | Goldberg et al. | Feb 2000 | A |
6213935 | Mackin et al. | Apr 2001 | B1 |
6224539 | Jones et al. | May 2001 | B1 |
6709384 | Donnely et al. | Mar 2004 | B1 |
6953427 | Mackin et al. | Oct 2005 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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WO03030797 | Apr 2003 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050070756 A1 | Mar 2005 | US |