Shishkabob
Forum Chief
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Have to do that with the non-power Strykers, too.First you have to support the weight while the landing gear retracts.
If they can sit, put them on a stair chair out to the stretcher. If they can't sit, they don't need to be put in chair mode in the first place.Second, in the field, they can't go to chair mode so pivitoting someone is out of the question.
Going to have to lift them anyhow, whether the stretcher goes flat to the ground or not.Third, when all the way down, they are still about 6-9 inches off the ground so someone on the ground still needs to be lifted that high.
And 4th, when you are in rough terrain, you gotta pick up the cot, and with all of that gear on it it adds at elast 75 lbs if not more.
Doing a year of rural EMS with power stretchers, that really was never an issue. If the terrain was rough enough to preclude strether, we had backboards. Otherwise, you roll it and go with the bumps.
What about a device similar to the Hovermat, but it inflates to a higher level allowing you to slide the patient to the gurney, similar to a bed. (Or airbed)
Oh, it seems they have this already: http://www.hovermatt.com/hoverJack
My agency has a couple matts / jacks, I've used the matt once and it really does make it much easier to move the fat people around like they actually weighed 500 less pounds. The jacks apparently work pretty well too.