The invention relates to providing a lift for fallen persons within their house, based on a stepladder designed for that while also storagable and usable as a household stepladder.
The risk of falls is rising fast with aging populations, boosted by the prevalence of vision and balance problems, muscle weakness and more. More than one in three people aged 65 and over falls each year (www.nia.nih.gov/health/prevent-falls-and-fractures). And younger people fall too, of course, especially where affected by circulatory problems, MS, Parkinsons, arthritis and other problems. Wheelchair-bound people may fall in transferring from chair to bed or vice versa. Falls may do little harm but often the fallen person (the “patient”) is unable to get back up. A helpmate can make a crucial difference for some—while risking injuring themselves—but the weaker or heavier patient usually needs more than one helper.
Hospitals and nursing homes often have very fine equipment to raise fallen patients and transfer them into a bed. Their designs generally parallel the construction industry's “tower crane” or “boom crane”, with the victim first rolled onto a flat sling-like lifter roped to the crane above. The rigs are not usable in a typical house or apartment, however, generally being too tall or wide or at least too costly.
Clever smaller rigs are available for households. Examples: stacked inflatable cushion lifts (David Garman, Wales, https://mangarhealth.com/store/product/patient-lifting/elk-lifting-cushion); miniature “fork lifts” (Van Oirschot, California, http://indeelift.com/); remarkable scissor-action lift (Lykkegard, Denmark, www.liftup.dk). But such household rigs also have drawbacks: interference with rolling the patient onto the lift; the need to sit the patient up first; difficulty in keeping the patient steady and safe during the lift; awkwardness in moving the patient off the rig and onto a chair or bed; reliance on sling designs which tend to force knees up toward chest, potato-sack fashion; and always, intrinsic costliness, raising the question of how many would invest so much in a single-purpose device which—one always hopes—will never be needed?
The purpose of this invention is to provide an affordable household lift device (“lift”) wherewith a helper can raise a fallen person (“patient”) from the floor safely into a chair or wheelchair, the device serving also as a stepladder storably foldable and usable within the house. The stepladder structure is designed to accept and secure a winch under its top and provide adequate room between its rails to accommodate the patient, whereupon the helper can help the fallen patient roll onto a sling laid out on the floor, mount the winch on the stepladder, set the stepladder over the patient, connect the sling to the winch line, crank or power the winch to lift the slung patient to a sitting position within the stepladder, push a wheelchair or other chair under the patient and lower the patient into it. The winch line is then detached from the sling, which itself remains comfortably on the seat cushion under the patient, who can then get on with daily living or get moved into bed to rest or await further care if needed.
These and other features and advantages of the invention will become more apparent when the detailed description is studied in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which like elements are designated by like reference characters. What is described is our test-piece “ladder lift”—which was crucially tested two days after assembly: a 6′-4″, 250 lb patient was lifted from a serious fall by his spouse and nicely reseated in his wheelchair.
Terms: “Rail” has been somehow established to denote a stepladder leg. “Width” here refers to the distance between the two rails supporting the steps. “Front” here refers to that step side, “rear” the opposite side, and “side” the remaining aspect in which “spread” refers to the distance from front rail to rear rail directly behind, the maximum spread being the distance between the feet of the front rails from the feet of the rear rails. “Spreader” has been somehow established to denote spread-preventing ties that keep the feet of the rear rails from sliding farther away from those of the front rails.
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(While the illustrated winch 2 is manually operated, it could of course be an electric motor type, although that would add cost and considerably more weight.)
It should be noted that the changes made to the usual stepladder design (to keep it short enough for household use but broad enough to accommodate the lifted patient) have shortened the distance of the spreaders 1d from the top, increasing “leverage” tension on the spreaders and bending force on the rails; some strengthening may be justified. And, back to