In Emergency Medical Services, saving time can mean saving lives. This is particularly true for first responders in an ambulance dealing with trauma. Ready and easy access to medical supplies is essential and can be problematic in the confines of a moving ambulance. The emergency medical techs (EMU) must quickly retrieve the bandages, intravenous supplies, medications and other equipment needed to deal with a patient. Included in those various devices and supplies are intravenous (IV) bags used to dispense fluids into the body of the patient. For example, in those situations where the patient is dehydrated, it is imperative that intravenous transfusion be started immediately and the EMT must reach for and select the required size of IV bag laid flat in a container and stored horizontally, one on top of another. This present arrangement makes what should be a simple task more difficult than it has to be. Likewise something as simple as reaching for a bandage can waste precious time if the EMT has to open a box of bandages or root through an open box of bandages to pull only one bandage. In addition, the boxes must be securely contained to withstand the vibration, bumps and motion associated with a fast moving ambulance.
It is an object of this invention to provide a spring loaded dispenser for packaged bandages in ambulance use. The most commonly used bandage sizes are 4 inch by 4 inch and 2 inch by 2 inch, although this invention is suitable for any bandage size or shape, whether square or rectangular. The inventive dispenser would preferably have a plastic or other suitable non-metallic housing attached by any suitable method to a flat panel or other surface in the interior of an ambulance within arm's reach of an EMT dealing with a patient being transported in the ambulance. It is also intended that multiple packaged bandages be loaded in the dispenser through a dispenser opening against a moveable pusher plate causing compression of an internal spring placed between the rear end of the dispenser and the pusher plate. As the packaged bandages are removed from the dispenser opening one by one, the next available package is disposed and held in the dispenser opening in a convex shape against tabs at the top and bottom of the dispenser opening.
It is also an object of the present invention to offer a distinct improvement over the existing arrangement for EMTs to retrieve the properly sized IV bag one at a time without having to grope through a box of IV bags. In the present invention, IV bags are loaded flat into the top of a hollow dispenser of rectangular shape and dispensed one by one in a dispensing tray at the bottom of the dispenser. The hollow dispenser allows the IV bags to move downward under their own weight in the dispenser. The dispenser would be sized for a particular size of IV bag and mounted on a vertical surface in an ambulance within reach of the EMTs.
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The present application is a Divisional application of, and claims priority under 35 USC § 121 to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 16/938,215, (the '215 application) filed on Jul. 24, 2020, entitled MEDICAL SUPPLY DISPENSER FOR AMBULANCE USE, and claiming priority from U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/879,133, filed Jul. 26, 2019. The '215 application is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety, for all purposes.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62879133 | Jul 2019 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 16938215 | Jul 2020 | US |
Child | 18134267 | US |