The present invention relates to a medicine cart having a large number of cassettes each of which stores a plurality of medicines arranged in a row in an upright state, which are provided for their respective types of medicines, and is capable of taking out or returning medicines required at a hospital or the like one by one from the forefront and also capable of calculating the quantity of medicines taken out and controlling inventory thereof.
As this type of a medicine cart, patent document 1 proposes a medicine storage device, in which a cassette inclined with the take-out side thereof facing downward stores a plurality of medicines arranged in a row in the upright state, the medicines are biased forward by a weight that contacts with a rearmost medicine, and the medicines are taken out one by one from an entrance provided in the corner of the front end of the cassette or the medicine taken out is returned therefrom.
However, with the medicine storage device of patent document 1, since only the entrance at the front end of the cassette opens, the weight first needs to be pressed away rearward and then the medicines needs to be shifted rearward one by one for storage, which requires troublesome medicine filling operation. To return the medicine taken out, the medicine to be returned is made in contact with the medicine at the forefront exposed to the entrance of the cassette and all the medicines are lifted up against the biasing force of the weight, whereby the medicine is pressed in the empty space, which raises problems such as poor workability at the time of returning the medicine.
In view of the problem described above, the present invention has been made and it is an object of the invention to provide a medicine cart having excellent workability at the time of filling and returning medicines. It is also an object of the invention to provide a medicine cart capable of preventing a medicine at the second position from the forefront from coming out when the medicine is to be taken out.
To achieve the object described above, the present invention provides a medicine cart including an upwardly opening cassette that stores a plurality of medicines arranged in a row in an upright state and a pressing member that presses forward a rearmost medicine in the cassette, wherein, at the pressing side end part of the pressing member, an insert guide part is firmed so that the medicine can be inserted between the pressing member and the rearmost medicine.
With the means described above, the cassette opens upward, which permits easily filling the medicine from this wide opening. Moreover, by pressing the medicine taken out against the insert guide part, the medicine can be guided to the insert guide part and easily inserted between the pressing member and the rearmost medicine.
It is preferable that the insert guide part have a surface formed in a shape of a circular arc as viewed from a direction in which the medicine is inserted and that the circular arc shaped surface have a radius of curvature that is larger than the radius of the medicine.
It is preferable that the insert guide part be formed by notching the pressing member.
It is preferable that, in the cassette, a coming-out preventing member be provided which covers the upper portion of a head part or shoulder part of the medicine at the second position from the forefront. Consequently, upon taking out the medicine at the forefront, even when the medicine at the second position also lifts up due to friction, this is prevented by the coming-out preventing member.
According to the present invention, at the pressing side end part of the pressing member, an insert guide part is provided so that the medicine can be inserted between the pressing member and the rearmost medicine, thereby permitting easily filling the medicine from a wide opening. Moreover, only by pressing a medicine taken out against the insert guide part, the medicine taken out can be easily inserted, thereby improving workability at the time of filling and returning the medicine.
A coming-out preventing member is provided which covers an upper portion of a head part or shoulder part of a medicine at the second position from the forefront. Consequently, upon taking out the forefront medicine, the medicine at the second position can be prevented from coming out, thereby permitting reliably taking out the medicines one by one.
Hereinafter, an embodiment of the present invention will be described, with reference to the accompanying drawings.
The medicine cart 1 has a main body 3 formed in a box-like shape and having a front surface thereof open. The lower half part of the front surface of the main body 3 is oriented perpendicularly, and the upper half part thereof is inclined rearward. On the bottom surface of the main body 3, four casters 4 are provided so that the medicine cart 1 is movable. To the lower half part of the main body 3, three drawer bodies 5 are so provided vertically as to be drawable forward. In these drawer bodies 5, different types of supplies are stored. The opening in the front surface of the upper half part of the main body 3 is closable by the shutter 2 as shown in
The aforementioned drawing rack 6 is composed of side plates 7 on the right and left sides and shelf plates 8 provided vertically in three levels. Each shelf plate 8 is so supported as to be drawable forward along a slide rail 9 provided on the side plate 7 on the right and left sides. The front ends of the shelf plates 8 provided vertically in three levels are arranged in a step-like manner so that the one in the first level is located forward of the second and third levels while those in the second and third levels are shifted rearward and at an upward position from the second to the third levels. On the top surfaces of the shelf plates 8, a plurality of cassettes 10 are arranged respectively. To the front end of each shelf plate 8, as shown in
The respective cassettes 10 of the shelf plates 8 store different types of medicines (ampoules in this embodiment) 15 and thus have different sizes depending on the medicines 15 to be stored, although their basic structure are the same. Hereinafter, a description will be given, referring to any one of the cassettes 10.
The cassette 10 has an anteroposteriorly long box shape with the upper side thereof opening and is capable of storing the medicines 15 arranged in a row, as shown in
On the inner bottom surface of the cassette 10, as shown in
The slide resistance unit 31, as shown in
The medicine 15 stored and arranged in a row in the cassette 10 is pressed forward by the pressing member 47. The pressing member 46 is, as shown in
Below the vibration-preventing boss 49 on the side surface of the pressing member 47, a depression 52b is formed, to which a pair of brushes 56 are fitted which makes sliding contact with the aforementioned slide resistance unit 31. This brush 56 is composed of: a base 57 formed of a plate-like electric conductor; and sliding parts 58 and 59 of conductive and elastic bodies fitted to the base 57 in parallel to each other. This brush 56 is designed such that fitting the base 57 to the pressing member 47 as shown in
In the medicine cart 1 structured as described above, to store the medicine 15, the front panel 11 is opened to take out the cassette 10 from the shelf plate 8, the pressing member 47 is moved rearward, and a given number of medicines 15 are stored between the pressing member 47 and the front end of the cassette 10. The medicines 15 are pressed forward by the pressing member 47.
When the cassette 3 is fitted to the shelf plate 8, the cassette side connector 24 and the shelf side connector 23 electrically contact with each other, whereby a voltage is supplied from the shelf plate 8 side to the slide resistance unit 31 of the cassette 10. The brush 56 of the pressing member 47 slides on the first and second slide resistance plates 37 and 38, and stops at a position in accordance with the quantity of the medicines 15. Where the stop position of the brush 56 is P, as shown in
Based on prescription information transmitted from a host computer when the medicine cart 1 is connected to the host computer, or based on prescription information inputted with a bar code reader or a keyboard when the medicine cart 1 is stand alone, the LED12 of the front panel 11, which corresponds to the cassette 10 storing the medicines 15 required for prescription, lights up or blinks. Note that the LED12 also lights up or blinks when the medicines 15 are missing.
The medicine 15 may be taken out by holding and lifting upward the medicine 15a, at the forefront, of the cassette 10. In this operation, the medicine 15b at the second position may come out together with the medicine 15a at the forefront due to friction, but the medicine 15b at the second position hits the coming-out preventing member 26 to be thereby prevented from coming out. When the medicine 15a at the forefront is taken out, the row of the medicines 15 is pressed forward by the pressing member 47, so that the medicine 15b located at the second position is placed at the forefront. In this manner, the required quantity of medicines 15 can be taken out sequentially. The shelf plates 8 provided vertically in three levels are arranged in the step-like manner so that they are shifted more rearward at more upward position from the first, the second, to the third levels. Thus, when the medicine 15 is to be taken out from the cassette 10 of the shelf plate 8 located at the first level at the bottom, the shelf plate 8 at the second level does not get in the way.
When a wrong medicine 15a is taken out or when an extra medicine 15a is taken out, this medicine 15a needs to be returned to the cassette 10. In this case, as shown in
In this manner, the aforementioned medicine cart 1 is capable of reliably taking out the medicines 15 one by one and also capable of easily returning the medicine 15a once taken out to the cassette 10, thereby providing the excellent workability at the time of filling and returning the medicine 15.
When the medicine cart 1 is not in use, the shutter 2 can be closed so that an unauthorized third party cannot take out the medicine 15, which provides safety. Moreover, it is preferable that the medicine cart 1 be powered off by closing the shutter 2.
In the aforementioned embodiment, a display panel may be provided to the top surface of the main body of the medicine cart 1 so that an image, a name, and the quantity of the medicines 15 taken out can be displayed on the display panel to thereby permit comparison between the medicine taken out and the display on the display panel.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2004-301715 | Oct 2004 | JP | national |
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PCT/JP2005/018617 | 10/7/2005 | WO | 00 | 4/13/2007 |
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WO2006/041025 | 4/20/2006 | WO | A |
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