WaukBoard

Rick Tresnak

Forum Crew Member
99
13
8
WaukBoard ---Has anyone used one of these in the field?
new-img-2.jpg
 

Anjel

Forum Angel
4,548
302
83
hand_dolly.png


???
 
OP
OP
Rick Tresnak

Rick Tresnak

Forum Crew Member
99
13
8
The Waukboard basically has the flip out foot board and wheels to make it easy to stand a person up and wheel them around on a board in tight spaces. I was just looking at them for our service and wanted to know if anyone had them. I know some services that have the wheels that attach to a backboard and they seem to like them.
 

DieselBolus

Forum Crew Member
80
33
18
The cost compared to a normal board is insane!

In a system where multiple companies all run to the same TC, you stand a good chance of losing a special/unique board if it ends up in the board cage in the ER bay. I've definitely gone through rigs on more than one occasion and found our rigs with particularly nice boards belonging to other companies.
 

TransportJockey

Forum Chief
8,623
1,675
113
Eh we use backboards so rarely out here, and I know back in NM is the same, that there'd be no point to get one of these. With more and more companies going to selective spinal restrictions or getting rid of LSB immobilization altogether, I think this is going to become an increasingly pointless product
 
OP
OP
Rick Tresnak

Rick Tresnak

Forum Crew Member
99
13
8
Good points. I thought it may be a great product for our medics ergonomic ally. Thanks for the input. We in iowa still use backboards but there is talk about going away from them.
 

Jon

Administrator
Community Leader
8,009
58
48
Good points. I thought it may be a great product for our medics ergonomic ally. Thanks for the input. We in iowa still use backboards but there is talk about going away from them.
If you truly want to improve ergonomics and save your crew members backs, then you should work to get rid of long boards.
 

Handsome Robb

Youngin'
Premium Member
9,736
1,173
113
It would be really useful here actually.

All the old motels/apartment buildings aren't built to today's codes so we don't fit in them unless they're ventricle or on a stairchair in a KED.

With that said we're moving away from constant backboarding.
 

TransportJockey

Forum Chief
8,623
1,675
113
It would be really useful here actually.

All the old motels/apartment buildings aren't built to today's codes so we don't fit in them unless they're ventricle or on a stairchair in a KED.

With that said we're moving away from constant backboarding.
You transport ventricles on backboards? Lol
 
OP
OP
Rick Tresnak

Rick Tresnak

Forum Crew Member
99
13
8
It would be really useful here actually.

All the old motels/apartment buildings aren't built to today's codes so we don't fit in them unless they're ventricle or on a stairchair in a KED.

With that said we're moving away from constant backboarding.
I have been thinking of getting one to see how it would work. I see the benefits of them. They used to have wheels you can attach to a board but you'd make stirrups to keep the patient up right. That took time. This seems slick.
 
Top