This is called "Hurt the therapist transfer." Tactile cues may also be very important to use. The patient may not be able to hear you when you r in a headlock.
As a student pta, this scares me...her back is rounded the entire time, the patient cannot see where their going because her head is consistently on the wrong side, and she placed the patients arm around her neck when it should have been placed within the gait belt....I stopped the video half way through because it frustrated me...
I'm also a spta and I was shocked to see her back position. I also have never seen someone put the patient's arm around their neck.. looks very uncomfortable. I think hugging the patient is better.
Good video except the 3:15 mark for dependent transfer. We have been taught in school never to let the patient grab your neck or shoulder in this scenario. Plus, she's completely horizontal and twisting with the patient (which was just covered at 2:50 or so). Wish there was more video on actual bed mobility exercises. Have yet to find one.
There are some people criticizing too much here. I have seen a lot of transfers WORST than this one. All you have to do is be careful with the patient safety and your own. Proper BOS, COG, Etc. I would do some things different, but in general, It wasn't that bad.
She placed the arm that way because the arm was entirely flaccid. Obviously no therapist is going to place the arm around their neck if the patient has any strength in it.
This is called "Hurt the therapist transfer." Tactile cues may also be very important to use. The patient may not be able to hear you when you r in a headlock.
As a student pta, this scares me...her back is rounded the entire time, the patient cannot see where their going because her head is consistently on the wrong side, and she placed the patients arm around her neck when it should have been placed within the gait belt....I stopped the video half way through because it frustrated me...
I'm also a spta and I was shocked to see her back position. I also have never seen someone put the patient's arm around their neck.. looks very uncomfortable. I think hugging the patient is better.
this is additional knowledge to care for my teachings
Very useful video thanks for uploading it
Good video except the 3:15 mark for dependent transfer. We have been taught in school never to let the patient grab your neck or shoulder in this scenario. Plus, she's completely horizontal and twisting with the patient (which was just covered at 2:50 or so). Wish there was more video on actual bed mobility exercises. Have yet to find one.
На рус:ком можно
the patient is not supposed to hold onto the therapist's neck on 3:15. pretty dangerous for the therapist
That's what I was shocked to see myself. That's an instant fail in my class.
+Dylan England what about CVA their affected arm, or do you feel shoulder is ok
+Danielle McKenna If the UE is flaccid, placing it onto your shoulder during a max A transfer could further sublux the GH.
There are some people criticizing too much here. I have seen a lot of transfers WORST than this one. All you have to do is be careful with the patient safety and your own. Proper BOS, COG, Etc. I would do some things different, but in general, It wasn't that bad.
Thank you for posting!
more videos pls. you Physical Therapists and doctors Helps us PT students to learn more...
We always learned to have the patient look to where they are going. Here they have the patient look away - seems counter-intuitive.
Yeah that looked freaky wrong. Back was rounded and she was getting her neck torqued on. Why not just block the knees and do a normal stand-pivot?
Перелом шейки бедра левой ноги немогу перевернутся на правую подскажите.
How to transfer a patient onto bed that is in late, late Alzheimer's stage. She can hardly stand and can not walk at all on her own.
Hoyer lift
I would like to see a transfer of a 15 stone woman with no legs
💎👍👍👍
DEPENDENT TRANSFER NOT ANYMORE IMPLEMENTED AS THIS WILL HURT THERAPISTS/PTA/CAREGIVERS.
She placed the arm that way because the arm was entirely flaccid. Obviously no therapist is going to place the arm around their neck if the patient has any strength in it.
I bet PTs would have placed the flaccid arm in a sling or have the patient cradled her flaccid arm during the transfer :D
wrong, wrong, wrong
pretty bad posture and mechanics... if i were to replicate this i would have failed part of my clinicals. they dont teach it like this anymore
ضع٥
Very bad technique
wrong ..
so wrong. bed to low for starters
9
Dangerous technique, use mechanical lifting aids, much safer.