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Saving your back: How do horizontal patient transfer devices stack up? | LitMetric

Saving your back: How do horizontal patient transfer devices stack up?

Nursing

When this article was written, David W. Bacharach was a professor in the department of kinesiology and director of the Human Performance Lab at St. Cloud State University (SCSU) in St. Cloud, Minn., where Kyle Miller was a research assistant. Serge P. von Duvillard is a visiting professor from the University of Salzburg in Austria. SCSU nursing faculty members Susan Herm, MS, RN, associate professor; Kathy Koepke, MS, RN, clinical labs coordinator; and Joyce Simones, EdD, RN, department chair, with combined clinical experience of over 50 years, acted as caregivers transferring patients and rating devices. Glenn Street, PhD, professor of biomechanics in the Human Performance Lab, assisted with instrumentation and project design for this study.

Published: January 2016

The authors evaluated the use of a new transfer device (roller tray) and compared it with three commonly used devices (slide board, nylon tube, and roller board). Caregivers experienced the greatest low back stress moving patients weighing 70 to 90 kg (approximately 150 to 200 lb). Qualitative data overwhelmingly favored the new roller tray with disposable absorbent underpads over the other devices. Caregivers experienced the greatest L4-5 torque not when transferring the heaviest patients (over 90 kg or approximately 200 lb), but rather when transferring those weighing 70 to 90 kg. These "middle-weight" patients are often moved using only two instead of three caregivers or a lift team, as are used for heavier patients. Caregivers should use three caregivers (two pullers and one pusher) even when patients are medium weight. The researchers' nursing faculty members are enthusiastic about using the new transfer device in their teaching stations.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/01.NURSE.0000475501.70596.2bDOI Listing

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