This invention relates to an emergency patient treatment system and, more particularly, to a convertible aircraft furniture system that provides a seating system that can be converted to provide patient treatment when such a need arises.
The seating arrangement of most commercial aircraft is commonly configured to accommodate a maximum number of passengers and to meet seat assembly weight constraints to meet a tolerable passenger space demand and maximize the financial efficiency associated with operation of such aircraft. The maximum space associated with any given passenger is commonly relegated to the seating layout of the respective aircraft. Although most aircraft include seating that is slightly adjustable to provide upright and at least partly reclined seating orientations, most aircraft seating only tolerates seated passenger orientations. Although such seating systems provide limited passenger comfort, circumstances can arise when it would be desirable or even necessary to accommodate generally prone positioning of a passenger. Medical emergencies are one such instance wherein a more prone passenger orientation is desired or necessary to effectuate a desired treatment or attention to the pertinent in-flight health emergency.
Respiratory distress is one such event wherein prone positioning of a patient can beneficially mitigate patient distress. Prone positioning of a patient, commonly understood as raising the legs and declining the torso relative to a vertical orientation and to be more generally aligned with the hips even though not in a gravitationally horizontal position, is commonly understood, for example, to improve patient oxygenation, improve respiratory mechanics, homogenize pleural pressure gradients, improve alveolar inflation and ventilation distribution, increase lung volume and reduce atelectatic regions, facilitate drainage of secretions, and to reduce ventilator-associated lung injury.
Achieving a generally prone patient orientation in an in-flight aircraft environment presents problems unique to the environment. For instance, prone positioning of a passenger can be achieved by placement of the patient in an aisle. Unfortunately, laying a distressed passenger in an aisle has several inherent drawbacks. For instance, witnessing such an event may cause anguish to other passengers, leaves the distressed passenger generally unsecured to the underlying aircraft, obstructs egress passageways, and provides only very limited access to the distressed passenger by those capable of diagnosing and rendering treatment to the distressed passenger.
Positioning a distressed passenger in an aisle may also substantially limit access of the care provider to any medical accessories associated with a desired treatment of the distressed passenger. That is, medical treatment systems and/or accessories, and/or access thereto, are commonly only located at fore and aft available spaces of the aircraft. Commonly, a patient located in an aisle is impassable such that treatment personnel must be assisted by others who can travel to the fore and aft stowage locations to retrieve requested treatment accessories. Each of the considerations above detracts from expeditious and efficient treatment of a distressed passenger and can disrupt the in-flight experience of non-afflicted passengers. Providing more robust patient systems, such as gurneys or the like, that can be stored or stowed in non-use locations tends to detract from efficient space utilization of the underlying aircraft. That is, such a system detracts from the underlying objective of transporting a maximum number of non-distressed passengers with each use of the underlying aircraft due to the omission of usually multiple seats from the aircraft seating layout to accommodate the possible but still infrequent use of the gurney.
Accordingly, there is a need for an aircraft seating system that is lightweight and usable as seated passenger seating during non-emergency situations and which accommodates prone positioning of a distressed passenger during in-flight health emergency situations. Preferably, the seating system is constructed to accommodate storage of one or more medical accessories associated with treatment of a distressed passenger and to cooperate with other movable medical accessories, such as supplemental medical accessory containers or the like and/or a stretcher associated with supporting and/or transporting a patient in a generally prone as compared to a more seated orientation.
The present invention provides an aircraft furniture system that includes a couch or the like having one or more cushions that extend along a seat thereof. The cushions can be secured to the couch or removable therefrom. The system includes a stowable medical consumable accessory container that removably cooperates with the frame defined by the couch. A stowable stretcher can removably cooperate with the frame or an upper surface of the stowable medical consumable accessory container so as to support a person in need of medical attention in a generally prone position. One or more slidable drawers are supported by the frame generally beneath the seating area or the cushions associated therewith. The one or more drawers are configured to contain medical accessories such as gas tanks, heat and/or power sources, air, gas, and/or vacuum pumps, etc. Such a furniture assembly provides for a limited size and mass associated with systems that must be retrieved from stored or stowage locations during medical emergencies that may occur during operation of an aircraft and presents a furniture configuration that can be used for passenger seating during non-emergency aircraft use.
One aspect of the invention contemplates an aircraft seating system that includes a frame that has a length that is sufficient to support a prone use. The system includes at least one cushion that cooperates with the frame to accommodate use of the couch by users in a passenger cabin of an aircraft. A first drawer and a second drawer slidably cooperate with the frame and are movable between open and closed positions to expose the contents of the respective drawer. The first drawer is configured to receive a first medical accessory and the second drawer is configured to support a second medical accessory for use during an in-flight medical emergency. Such a system allows treatment of a passenger experiencing an in-flight medical emergency with the treated passenger in a generally prone position.
Another aspect of the invention that is usable with one or more of the features of the present invention contemplates an aircraft furniture system that includes a couch having a frame that defines a longitudinal length with arm sections at opposite ends thereof. At least one drawer slidably cooperates with the frame beneath a seat thereof. The drawer defines a medical accessory storage compartment configured to receive at least one medical gas cylinder. The system includes a stowable stretcher that removably cooperates with the couch to support a patient in a prone and secured orientation within the aircraft cabin.
A further aspect of the invention contemplates a method of providing an aircraft medical treatment system. The method includes providing a frame having a seating section that has a longitudinal length and a lateral depth that are sufficient to accommodate more than one person in seated orientations and a single person in a prone orientation. At least one drawer is attached to the frame so that the drawer is disposed below the seating section when the drawer is closed. An interior surface of the drawer is shaped to removably secure at least one medical gas cylinder to the drawer in a generally horizontal orientation. Such a system provides an aircraft medical treatment system that can be utilized for seating when no emergency health conditions exist and provides expedient access to devices and systems associated with treatment of emergency medical conditions.
These and various other features, aspects and advantages of the present invention will be made apparent from the following detailed description taken together with the drawings, which together disclose the best mode presently contemplated of carrying out the invention.
The drawings illustrate the best mode presently contemplated of carrying out the invention.
In the drawings:
A specific embodiment of the present invention will now be further described by the following, non-limiting example which will serve to illustrate various features of the invention. With reference to the drawing figures, in which like reference numerals designate like parts throughout the disclosure, a representative embodiment of a seating arrangement in the form of a couch 22 of a medical emergency aircraft furniture system or an aircraft furniture system 20 in accordance with the present invention is shown in
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Representatively, container 62 is configured to fit slidably between arms 26, 28 of frame 24 of couch 22. Although seat cushions 34 are shown removed from frame 24, it is envisioned that couch 22 and container 62 could be configured to cooperate with one another with or without the removal of seat or back cushions 34, 36. It is appreciated that some patient treatment processes and/or cushion and frame constructions may lend themselves more to one of removal of cushions 34, 36 or leaving cushions 34, 36 in place.
A suitable latch or retention mechanism may be interposed between container 62 and seating area 32, which enables container 62 to maintain a fixed position relative to couch 22 when in use. It is envisioned that such a retention mechanism can be provided as one or more removable and/or securable straps, a more rigid latching mechanism, interfering or overlapping geometric interfaces, and/or combinations thereof. Container 62 may include one or more drawers or compartments 64, 66, 68, 70 that are each shaped to accommodate storage of consumable medical products, such as gauze, tapes, ointments or topical treatments, pills and/or other intravenous medications and materials associated with application of the same, a defibrillator, etc., and/or other desired accessories as may be necessary during treatment of a distressed passenger or patient. Each compartment 64, 66, 68, 70 may include an operable latch, catch or lock 72, 74, 76, 78 associated with securing the respective drawer or door associated with compartments 64, 66, 68, 70 relative to the body of container 62. The one or more catches or locks 72, 74, 76, 78 may be constructed to be securable so as to limit access to the contents of container 62 to a restricted user or group of users. For instance, the one or more catches or locks 72, 74, 76, 78, and/or drawers when compartments 64, 66, 68, 70 are provided in such a configuration, are constructed to cooperate with container 62 in a manner wherein the respective door or drawer maintains a relative position even during aircraft operation.
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Each of upper support 98 and lower support 100 includes a pad or cushion 106, 108 associated with supporting a distressed passenger. One or more straps 110, 112, 114, 116, 118 are secured to stretcher 80. One or more of straps 110, 112, 114, 116, 118 include a securing mechanism such as a buckle 120, 122, 124 associated with providing an adjustable and selectively securable connection of the respective straps 110, 112, 114, 116, 118 to respective portions thereof as well as the underlying generally rigid structures of stretcher 80. Such a construction allows stretcher 80 to be configured to secure distressed passengers of various sizes relative thereto.
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The variable and generally prone orientation of the patient as well as the immediate passenger cabin access to those accessories associated with drawers 44, 46 improves the response time associated with initial patient assessment and treatment. Although couch 22 is positioned in the passenger cabin of an aircraft and useable by passengers as a couch during non-emergency situations, aircraft emergency medical response times can be improved as a large portion of the medical response equipment is already positioned in the aircraft passenger cabin and is in the vicinity of a desired treatment area whereas bulky, awkward, and/or heavy response gurneys and/or containers need not be retrieved from one or more stowed locations about the aircraft prior to the initiation of a desired emergency medical response. It is envisioned that even the stowable structure of system 20, such as container 62 and stretcher 80, can be stowed at aircraft locations proximate couch 22 but even if not, are compact and lightweight enough for a single even moderately fit person to retrieve and associate container 62 and/or stretcher 80 with couch 22 during emergency events requiring a medical response. Aircraft furniture system 20 provides a seating system that is usable by more than one passenger during non-emergency use of aircraft 37 and which can be quickly configured to accommodate a prone user or distressed passenger at locations that do not otherwise obstruct passenger movement paths, allows isolation of the distressed passenger treatment from remaining passengers, and allows expedient access to the medical treatment systems and accessories for treatment of distressed passengers.
Various alternatives and embodiments are contemplated as being within the scope of the following claims particularly pointing out and distinctly claiming the subject matter regarded as the invention.
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/658,155 filed on Jun. 11, 2012 titled “Modular Aircraft Emergency Bed System” and the entire disclosure of which is incorporated herein.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61658155 | Jun 2012 | US |