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There is a wide range of population using variety of medical walkers offered in the marketplace. Most commonly, the walkers are in use by people with some kind of disabilities, elderly, people with short or long term injuries, and patients in hospitals, rehabilitations, and nursing homes. In some cases the user needs to be accompanied with a caring assistance and in other cases the user can independently operate the walker. In any events, sudden uncontrollable situation can lead to the user's fall-down and result in serious injuries depending on the severity of the fall.
This invention introduces a walker with seating capability that provides a safety mechanism to prevent the fall and its potential regretful damage(s). The safety mechanism introduced here is an addition to the prior developed arts that are already in use of public. In general a walker consists of 2 sides connected together with a front frame; each side has a front and rear frame connected together with side bars and hand grips that the user can use to support himself while using the walker; and 2 latches to fold and unfold the side frames against the front frame.
This innovative walker, in addition to the features listed above, has 4 safety legs that provide a fixed and stable position for the seating walker, and two drop-down seat pads that upon deployment, are available for the user to sit on. It also has two steel bars located at the lower end of each side above the front wheels that connect the front and rear frame of each side together providing additional stability. The legs and seat pads are held in place by latches and cable bars that are running inside the frames.
The NAHO Deployable Seat Medical walker is a new product introduced to the medical market. It is designed to save the users from falling in unstable conditions or unforeseeable fall situations. The safety feature provides additional control to the users and enables them to walk the desired distance more fearlessly and safely. Additionally, given this sense of independence, motivates the users to advance their activities and also reduces the needs to attending staff and frees them to other priorities.
The technology introduced here is a new safety feature that can be utilized by automatic or manual activation of connected sensors. The seating capability added to a foldable and moveable walker is the novelty claimed here. The safety operation begins by activation of the sensors located on the front handle bar on each side. Upon execution, the walker would convert to a seating chair by extending its four legs and two seat pads. The assemblies of the seat pads and the legs are of pull cable recoil-spring assembly type.
The sensors' activation toggles the system on each frame, releasing the tension cables that are holding the front and rear legs and the seat pads in place. As a result, the legs turn 90 degrees toward the ground and the seat pads drop down to the sitting position. The walker can resume its original configuration by a second push on the sensors. The sensors invert the toggle system, pull the cables on the recoil pulleys, and reverse the turns of the legs to neutral position; and the walker will resume its normal configuration.
Referring to
Referring to
Each of the sensors is connected to the snap-through system at the apex via a pin. When activated, manually or automatically, the pin exerts a force on the apex that inverts its position from (2A) to (2B). In position (2A), the pulleys are maintaining the pull cables and exerting tension on the recoil spring assemblies that hold the legs and the seat pads in place. When the snap-through system inverts to position (2B), the duplex control pulleys turn and release the tension on three pull cables of each side by freeforwarding the stored cables. The other end of each of the pull cables is attached to a recoil spring assembly that operates the front leg, the rear leg and the seat pad.
Each recoil-spring assembly has a housing that stores the spring that the pull cable is attached to. The cover to the housing is a disc. The seat pads and the legs are adjustably attached to the discs of the assembly system. When the system snaps and toggles down, it pulses a load on the control pulley. The pulley releases the tension on the pull cable in each frame. The release of the tension on the pull cable, allows the recoil spring turn to its steady state (zero-force). As a result, the disc attached to the housing would turn which causes the rotation of the attached element about its axis. The pull cable of the seat pad is controlled by the upper segment of the control pulley and the leg is controlled by the lower segment of the control pulley of the snapping system.
Referring to
Referring to
To convert back the walker to its normal configuration, a push on the sensor would invert the snap-through system to position (1A). As a result of this inversion, the toggle exerts a force perpendicular to the pulley surface in the opposite direction. Since the force is in the opposite direction, the pulley turns in opposite direction and rewinds the pull cable which in turn, exerts the pull tension on the spring recoil assembly. The discs turn, and as a result the legs would rotate back to their original positions.
The sensors can be activated manually or automatically. In the manual activation, the user pushes the button on the sensor. The sensor sends a pulse signal to the pin. The pin acts on the toggle system and the walker reconfigures to a seating walker by executing the safety operation. The auto reconfiguration occurs when the sensors measure an off balance of the distribution of the weight between the two frames—that is when the weight of the user is measured significantly more on one side than the other, which is a sign of instability of the user. In that condition, the sensor sends the pulse signal to the pin, and the seating configuration of the walker begins.
Product Specification
It is considered to use light aircraft quality aluminum with high strength for the side frames, high strength steal bar for the safety bars and safety legs, and light weight parachute quality fabric or a nest shape seat made of vinyl for the seat pads. The sensors work on replaceable battery.
Marketable Walker Specification:
Additional specs:
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
5224721 | Santmann | Jul 1993 | A |
5636651 | Einbinder | Jun 1997 | A |
5649558 | Richard | Jul 1997 | A |
8490637 | Schroeder | Jul 2013 | B2 |
20140209133 | Pak | Jul 2014 | A1 |
20150223577 | Troy, Jr. | Aug 2015 | A1 |