The proliferation of stun guns among law enforcement, security forces and facilities for holding large animals throughout the world, has caused an unanticipated problem. Stun guns, such as the TaserĀ® gun, work by shooting barbed darts into the subject. These darts are connected to thin wires, through which a series electric pulses is passed to pacify the subject.
After the subject has been subdued, it is necessary for a responding professional to remove the dart(s) from the subject. This is typically done by holding the subject down with one hand, while removing the dart with the other. Unfortunately, during this operation the subject may suddenly move in an effort to gain freedom. This, in turn, may throw the responding professional off balance to the point that he inadvertently jabs the barbed end of the newly removed dart into the hand used to stabilize the body part that had received the dart.
Far from being a minor, temporary injury, this brief event may have a life-long and tragically life-shortening effect on the responding professional, who may contract-hepatitis, HIV or any one out of a long list of blood born pathogens from blood on the dart. This very occurrence has become all too common, with thousands of people all infected with a deadly virus through this mechanism or a related cause, such as an intra venous needle stick. Some way must be found to make the removal of stun gun darts safer for the personnel who must remove them from the subjects.
In a first separate aspect, the present invention may take the form of a method of removing a dart, having a base and a tip and wherein the base is wider than the tip, from animal soft tissue. The method makes use of a dart removal facilitating assembly, including a sharps container defining an opening sized to accept the base of the dart and also defining a slot contiguous with set opening, the slot being narrower than the base of the dart. The base of the dart is moved through the opening and the sharps container is moved so that the tip of the dart extends through the slot. Finally, the sharps container is to pull the dart out of the animal soft tissue.
In a second separate aspect, the present invention may take the form of a dart removal facilitating assembly that comprises a sharps container defining an opening sized to accept the base of the dart and also defining a slot contiguous with the opening, the slot being narrower than the base of the dart. A handle is removeably attached to the sharps container.
The foregoing and other objectives, features and advantages of the invention will be more readily understood upon consideration of the following detailed description of the preferred embodiment(s), taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
Referring to
In addition, spacer 16 incorporates a lighting system 22 (
In greater detail, head 18 is made light weight polycarbonate material and is detachably connected to spacer 16 by a mating dovetail key 30 and groove 31 combination (
The method of use and advantages of 10 may now be evident. A responding professional can hold tool 10 by hand grip 14 and guide it toward an embedded dart using sight 20 and the illumination provided by assembly 22. After guiding ears 32 so that dart is in slot 34, the professional may simply slide head 18 forward, so as to cause the wedge shape of each ear 32 to remove the dart. Accordingly, there is no need for the hand of the professional to touch the dart during the removal process. It is also within the scope of the method of the invention, however, for the professional to use tool 10 to restrain the part of the subject near the dart, and use his free hand to remove the dart.
Handle 14 is sized to fit comfortably in a human hand. Preferred embodiments exist with various handle sizes, to accommodate different sized hands. Spacer 16 may be of any length from 2 cm to 40 cm depending on the desired trade-off between maintaining a safe distance to the dart being removed, versus better control of the dart removal head 18. In one preferred embodiment spacer 16 has a user adjustable length. The length 50 of head 18 is preferably 7.2 cm (2.8 in) and its height 56 (
Because tool 10 can both hold the subject down and remove the dart, it permits the responding professional to avoid using one hand to hold the subject down while the dart is removed with the other hand. As noted in the background, it is the hand used to hold the subject down that is likely to be stuck by the dart, as the dart is removed. Even if the professional does use his free hand to remove the dart, however, the hand holding tool 10 is further from the subject at the moment when the dart is removed than it would otherwise be, and is therefore safer from a chance dart puncture.
In an alternative preferred embodiment, shown in
Sharps container 112 is releasably retained on handle 114 by means of a mating dovetail 144 and dovetail key 146. Container 112 may be tagged by way of closure eye 150 and removed from the handle 114, to be placed into evidence or stored for future study. A trigger 160 actuates a light that shines through container 112, to illuminate an area about a dart 118, during use of tool 110.
In the context of this application, a human body is a type of animal body.
The terms and expressions that have been employed in the foregoing specification are used as terms of description and not of limitation. There is no intention, in the use of such terms and expressions, of excluding equivalents of the features shown and described or portions thereof, it being recognized that the scope of the invention is defined and limited only by the claims which follow.
This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/909,704 filed Aug. 2, 2004 now U.S. Pat. No. 7,090,196.
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4736844 | Scott et al. | Apr 1988 | A |
5642887 | Orav | Jul 1997 | A |
5894925 | Sukiennik et al. | Apr 1999 | A |
6636412 | Smith | Oct 2003 | B2 |
20070039844 | Zyzelewski et al. | Feb 2007 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10909704 | Aug 2004 | US |
Child | 11269409 | US |