Very good to learn thank you, and I admired how you spoke regularly with Mr Williams and reassured him and let him know step by step what you were doing.
Love this video, I'ts the only one that I have found that reflects best practice in both manual handling techniques and use of the slide sheet. I used this video in my Manual handling class today. A job well done Melissa and Angela.
Because if they just roll him on his side as they did in first movement he'll be on the edge of the bed and may fall out. So they need to slide him into the middle so he wont fall off the bed when the on his side. You often need to reposition patients/clients with low mobility because if they stay in the same position they can suffer tissue damage and just generally sore muscles (blood flow blocked with long periods in same position).
As someone with poor memory due to brain injury this has been perfect for me....I've watched it regularly over a few days!
Thank you.
Very good to learn thank you, and I admired how you spoke regularly with Mr Williams and reassured him and let him know step by step what you were doing.
Love this video, I'ts the only one that I have found that reflects best practice in both manual handling techniques and use of the slide sheet. I used this video in my Manual handling class today. A job well done Melissa and Angela.
Thanks for this video I passed my manual handling course 🙏👍❤️🙏🙏 help me a lot.
Thank you, I think this technique was the best compared to other demonstrations using slide sheets.
Very WELL presented 👍🏿 Thank you 😊
Thank you, that made me improve my technic.
Thank you, I learned a lot
Helpful but I have to catch imagining because Melissa is more focused than the intention of the slide sheet.
So you put him on his side, so you can get a slide sheet under him, so you can get him on his side??
Where's the logic??
Because if they just roll him on his side as they did in first movement he'll be on the edge of the bed and may fall out. So they need to slide him into the middle so he wont fall off the bed when the on his side.
You often need to reposition patients/clients with low mobility because if they stay in the same position they can suffer tissue damage and just generally sore muscles (blood flow blocked with long periods in same position).
Good question, it got me thinking as well.
@@tiffanywilson6691 Good answer Tiffany, thanks for that :)
They forgot to lower the bed again afterwards.
Why are you rubbing the guys leg and arm, it's so strange !
showing you they are aligned with the body, is there no logic in persons thinking?
Why would the bed not have brakes on with him in it lmao ... I get looking at the brakes but putting them on ... bad lmao
If He is in it, he surely will not be moving it, don't you think!
Thank you for the demonstration. It would be good to see it using a full size bed rather than the very narrow one.