It took me a long time to finally land on this video. Happy for this therapist explaining my situation with my loved one so clearly! Strength on one leg- asymmetrical. This will help me so much. Thank you! Excellent video!
this is quite informative, especially during this time cuz my grandma couldnt stand up by herself now after she had an accident fell in her room.. but one thing though, that wide stance and squating, need to work out more lol:'))
A patient with Parkinsonism and not able to move any part of their body, and also having swallowing issues how do you transfer that patient from chair to bed and into a motor vehicle?
it talk about how to use pivot standing to move patient from bed to chair the chair must be place beside the strong part of the body, we should leg to block the weaker part of the leg and the arm of the patient must be holding our arm not shoulder because if the patient want to fall she may injure our neck
I didn't see her back straight. She bend down over her back to pick her up and sitting her down. This pulls on the lower back when picking up like this.
What did you see? When you hinge back the way she does your low back is straight along with the rest of her back (and weight transfered into hips/glutes). Do you think her torso needs to stay perfectly perpendicular? If she didn't hinge her hips back then she would like be rounding her low back to perform the lift and the lift would have been much more difficult and awkward.
I have no idea why this video would have “dislikes”. This is the most thorough transferring video I’ve seen on UA-cam so far...
It took me a long time to finally land on this video. Happy for this therapist explaining my situation with my loved one so clearly! Strength on one leg- asymmetrical. This will help me so much. Thank you! Excellent video!
Thank you so much. Deeply Appreciated !
amazing and very instructive
Very helpful. Thank you. Can you do a video transferring a patient to a comode with out transfer belt ? Pls
Glad this video was helpful!
Great information, thanks for sharing it. Will help me with my elderly grand pas.
broken ankle 7 days ago.
how long orthopaedic to see for relearn surgery or boots. after hospital AND assisted rehap could how, WHY, when, because..
this is quite informative, especially during this time cuz my grandma couldnt stand up by herself now after she had an accident fell in her room.. but one thing though, that wide stance and squating, need to work out more lol:'))
A patient with Parkinsonism and not able to move any part of their body, and also having swallowing issues how do you transfer that patient from chair to bed and into a motor vehicle?
A hoist.
Very nicely done! Thank you for sharing.
GREAT video thank you!!
Thanks for watching!
it talk about how to use pivot standing to move patient from bed to chair the chair must be place beside the strong part of the body, we should leg to block the weaker part of the leg and the arm of the patient must be holding our arm not shoulder because if the patient want to fall she may injure our neck
that you for sharing this 🙏
Doing a Replay
I didn't see her back straight. She bend down over her back to pick her up and sitting her down. This pulls on the lower back when picking up like this.
What did you see? When you hinge back the way she does your low back is straight along with the rest of her back (and weight transfered into hips/glutes). Do you think her torso needs to stay perfectly perpendicular?
If she didn't hinge her hips back then she would like be rounding her low back to perform the lift and the lift would have been much more difficult and awkward.
They are extremely expensive and medicare does not help with covering this bed. So necessary for Alzheimer an dementia patients.
Medicare part B will pay, by prescription, under Durable Medical Equipment.