Embodiments of the present invention generally relate to the field of covers for cups, and more particularly to a cover incorporating storage for medicines.
A variety of cups are now commonplace, for example, for drinking water, thereby assisting in taking medicines orally, or in general use for beverage consumption. Various cups include disposable cups, metallic cups, collapsible cups, and the like. Collapsible cups generally include a cover and a base, both of which are generally larger than the cup to provide an enclosure for conveniently carrying the cup in collapsed state. Non-collapsible cups may include or be provided with a cover to form an enclosed volume.
Generally, persons who take medicines frequently due to various kinds of indisposition tend to use collapsible cups because the collapsible cups are easy to carry around, and convenient even when travelling. Such persons may include elderly or persons who are impaired. Impairments may be associated with reduced mobility of limbs, reduced vision, among other impairments. In general, impairments may make manipulation of a cup, including regular or collapsible cup, difficult.
For example, a person with reduced hand mobility would find opening the cover of the collapsible cup of the pill-box, and/or gripping the base of the collapsible cup challenging. A person with reduced vision would find it difficult to differentiate between the cover and base, and find it difficult to remove the cover from the base for de-collapsing the cup. In general, impaired persons may find removing a cover from a regular, non-collapsible cup challenging for similar reasons.
Therefore, it would be desirable to have an improved cover for a cup.
Embodiments of the present invention provide a cover of a cup, substantially as shown in and/or described in connection with at least one of the figures, as set forth more completely in the claims.
These and other features and advantages of the present disclosure may be appreciated from a review of the following detailed description of the present disclosure, along with the accompanying figures in which like reference numerals refer to like parts throughout.
The present invention comprises a cover for a drinking cup, where the cover contains or incorporates a storage space. For example, a cover for a cup for drinking water, incorporating storage for medicines. Covers are especially common for collapsible cups, and collapsible cup art includes various methods to accomplish the collapsibility, including rigid multiple concentric rings that are able to be extended in an upward direction by being pulled up by the user, so as to form a liquid holding area for drinking etc., and a single piece flexible “rubber” type material that also has the ability to fold down upon itself in an accordion-type manner so as to form a compressed/reduced size. Covers for collapsible cups are typically engaged with a base on which the concentric rings are disposed.
The present invention improves upon known covers for non-collapsible or collapsible cups by providing a cover for a cup, where the cover incorporates storage, which extends beyond the cover, creating an overhang portion of the storage, which overhang yields additional benefits for the user. For example, the overhang portion provides an easy grip to a user to twist and remove the cover from the cup. The coers may be engaged with the cup of the base of the cup via a friction fit, or via a screw arrangement, and the overhang allows for a grip in both configurations. Additional assistance in grip may be provided by adding ridges to the base to provide a grip in the opposing twisting motion to further ease the removal of the cover from the cup. Even additionally, the overhang portion of the cover, or the ridges of the base are shaped to include recesses that make it easy for fingers to grip such recesses, further easing the process of twisting and removing the cover from the cup. Covers are particularly commonplace in collapsible cups, and are engaged with the base of the collapsible cup, and while further discussion is made with reference to collapsible cups having a cover and a base enclosing the collapsible cup within, it is understood that the cover described herein may be used equally well with non-collapsible cups, and engage with the opening of the cup. The storage space, for example, a compartment is incorporated within the cover such that the compartment has at least one dimension that is larger than the cover. For simplicity, the compartment portion of the cover is referred to as the compartment, while the rest of the portion is referred to as the lid, and in general, the storage-incorporating cover may also be viewed as a lid with one or more compartments therein. The larger outer dimension of the compartment forms an overhang of the compartment extending beyond the lid, which allows a user to grasp the edges of the compartment easily, for example to twisting, turning, pulling, or otherwise removing the cover off the cup. Therefore, the overhang portion provides additional storage to the compartment, while simultaneously providing an additional grip for a user to remove the cover from the cup.
Additionally the present invention may also include the use of a gripping elements, for example, ridges, protruding from the base of the cup. The gripping elements include ridges having a dimension larger than the base of the cup, or a texture in the gripping area on the lateral portion of the base, which allows the gripping element to be gripped simultaneously, thereby allowing for an application of a force opposing the force applied on the compartment overhang, further easing the process of removing the cover from the cup.
These features, alone, and in combination, provide a significant functional improvement for any user due to a better ease of use when separating the top cover from the base, and for anyone with impairments involving hand strength, motor planning, sight restrictions, and the like. Further, the overhang portion grip of the cover and/or the gripping elements along the base also enable a user to engage the cover with the cup, whether a collapsible cup, or a non-collapsible cup.
Several shapes of the compartment and the overhang thereof are possible so as to provide a convenient grip, for example, polygons providing an edge protrusion, other shapes providing recesses for fingers to engage. Further, the overhang portion edges may further include a roughened surface to enhance the grip. The shape of the overhang includes several regular shapes, for example, a circle or a portion thereof, a rectangle or a portion thereof, a polygon or a portion thereof, or irregular shapes that may be formed using a combination of the regular shapes or other shapes, for example, animal outline shapes, such as a cat face, or an elephant body, and the like. For simplicity, regular shapes, such as rectangles and circles have been described herein, but the embodiments described herein are not restricted to such shapes.
The larger outer dimension creating the overhanging compartment provides more space for storage, and for example, in the case of a pill box, there is more room for storing pills in the compartment. The additional space may also be used to create multiple separate compartments instead of a single compartment. These compartments can allow the user to separate and keep track of the contents in many ways, including by type of pill or by time of day, by medical requirements (i.e., all morning pills in one cavity, all afternoon pills in another, evening), etc. In turn, the compartments also comprise a compartment lid or lids. The compartment lid of these separate compartments can be in form of a single compartment lid which covers all compartments, or multiple compartment lids corresponding to one or two compartments, to allow for access to only a particular compartment while all the other compartments remain closed. The compartment lids can also be transparent to allow direct viewing of the contents without opening the cover, and thereby provide a visual indication if the pills have been taken or if they need to be refilled.
There are various ways to provide the above-noted features, only some of which are illustrated herein as exemplary.
The shape and positioning of the compartment 2 results in portions of the compartment 2 that overhang the round shape of the platform 10 to form one or more overhanging areas depicted as 4a, 4b and 4c in
The collapsible cup 8 can be made to many sizes although those most commonly found have a cup base of approx. 2.5″. The storage-incorporating cover can be sized proportionally to the cup size. In some embodiments the cover can be sized to engage smaller cups, while keeping the storage compartment size large, having relatively larger overhanging portion for smaller cups. The compartments can be sized as desired, in relation to or independent of the cup size.
According to some embodiments, one or more components described above can be made by injection molding techniques by injecting molten plastic in correspondingly shaped molds. According to some embodiments, one or more components described above can be made individually and joined together, for example, by glue, ultrasonic welding, among other well known techniques, to achieve the desired aggregated structure.
While known collapsible cups usually have a round top cover that forms a friction fit with a round base (alternatively the water-tight fit can be accomplished by a screw arrangement) in other embodiments of this invention cup top covers can be achieved using square, rectangle and other shapes that the collapsible cup can be housed in, and the corresponding base may have a shape that follows that design shape while still having the one or more overhanging grip areas on both the base and the cover.
The above described
While the embodiments described herein recite specific examples, other configurations with different permutations and combinations of features described herein would occur readily to those skilled in the art, and in included within the scope and the spirit of the invention as embodied by the claims.
This application claims the benefit of the U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/249,246, filed on Oct. 31, 2015, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62249246 | Oct 2015 | US |