Thank you so much for this video. It was very helpful. Although created years ago, the clear instructions and techniques are still relevant and useful. Blessings!
My understanding is to not lock the wheels of the lift unless necessary due to being on a slope. Having the wheels locked apparently creates a risk that it can tip over.
Suggestion: Do not push lift with the person's body higher than mid bar to prevent top heavy tipping over. The lift most likely should not be locked when lowering the person to the chair, this helps the lift to move center under the person to maintain stability. If it is locked it will not move and center under the person's body.
I need advice on using the hoyer lift with a heavy paraplegic man in a motorized wheelchair, how do I go about getting him seated far back enough in the wheelchair by myself? The motorized wheelchair seat is narrow
Using a lifter from bed to a wheelchair for comfort room i cant manage it well... my patient is paralytic her left hand & both legs is affected ..please help.. i want to see video of it.. thank u
I have using the lift for son since ten years before ,so now I need replacement of wheels damaged, How can I purchase them ? Unfortunately here in local coud not find any procurement agency in south Korea
That wouldn't work with my sister with MS . If you pushed her forward like they do at the end of video she would fall right over onto the floor. She's in pain when in the Hoyer lift..very uncomfortable she says.
ok I understand that this is a how-to-video but never lean the patient forward like the way this young woman did in this woman because depending on the patient and its disability the patient may not be able to lean forward on their own without sliding or falling and also if a person has some sort of spinal injury, leaning them forward like that cam damage the spinal cord even worse but damaging the lumber's....just a little extra information to the new viewers😊
I learned more in this video than I did in class..Thank you
Thank you so much for this video. It was very helpful. Although created years ago, the clear instructions and techniques are still relevant and useful. Blessings!
Thank you for this video. Great demo. No long over talking. Just simple steps.
I just got one for caring for my mom at home and this has put my mind at ease ❤️ thank you so much
This was extremely helpful. I am being trained next week.
Great video, simple steps;
My understanding is to not lock the wheels of the lift unless necessary due to being on a slope. Having the wheels locked apparently creates a risk that it can tip over.
I have completed watching this video.
Suggestion: Do not push lift with the person's body higher than mid bar to prevent top heavy tipping over. The lift most likely should not be locked when lowering the person to the chair, this helps the lift to move center under the person to maintain stability. If it is locked it will not move and center under the person's body.
I need advice on using the hoyer lift with a heavy paraplegic man in a motorized wheelchair, how do I go about getting him seated far back enough in the wheelchair by myself? The motorized wheelchair seat is narrow
Using a lifter from bed to a wheelchair for comfort room i cant manage it well... my patient is paralytic her left hand & both legs is affected ..please help.. i want to see video of it.. thank u
I have using the lift for son since ten years before ,so now I need replacement of wheels damaged, How can I purchase them ? Unfortunately here in local coud not find any procurement agency in south Korea
We are factory and sell the transfer lift. Do you still need it?
That wouldn't work with my sister with MS . If you pushed her forward like they do at the end of video she would fall right over onto the floor. She's in pain when in the Hoyer lift..very uncomfortable she says.
I have a different type of manual lift for my husband, but his is very uncomfortable too.
ok I understand that this is a how-to-video but never lean the patient forward like the way this young woman did in this woman because depending on the patient and its disability the patient may not be able to lean forward on their own without sliding or falling and also if a person has some sort of spinal injury, leaning them forward like that cam damage the spinal cord even worse but damaging the lumber's....just a little extra information to the new viewers😊
Deacon Harris how would you recommend to remove the sling from the patient
I never recommended to remove it, I was basically stating to have more support for the back
You are always supposed to remove the sling due to risks of pressure sores and it is uncomfortable to sit in.
Ya she is leaning him all over the place. Still liked vid though.
@@dbenj8219 Don't remove the sling. You'll need it on patient later anyway.
Don't let patient sit on seat belt (as shown) - Because it could cause severe trauma to the patient's ischium, tailbone, testicles etc....
SHEEEEEESH
Not a bad presentation, but it would have been a lot more believable with someone who wasn't obviously able bodied.
Please do an obese patient on a Hoyer to the wheel Chair.
We are factory and prodcue the tranfer lift. Do you still need the device?