US3893198A - Mattress for preventing bedsores - Google Patents

Mattress for preventing bedsores Download PDF

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US3893198A
US3893198A US239219A US23921972A US3893198A US 3893198 A US3893198 A US 3893198A US 239219 A US239219 A US 239219A US 23921972 A US23921972 A US 23921972A US 3893198 A US3893198 A US 3893198A
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mattress
cover
user
foam
straps
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E Allan Blair
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MEDIC EASE CORP
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    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61GTRANSPORT, PERSONAL CONVEYANCES, OR ACCOMMODATION SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR PATIENTS OR DISABLED PERSONS; OPERATING TABLES OR CHAIRS; CHAIRS FOR DENTISTRY; FUNERAL DEVICES
    • A61G7/00Beds specially adapted for nursing; Devices for lifting patients or disabled persons
    • A61G7/05Parts, details or accessories of beds
    • A61G7/057Arrangements for preventing bed-sores or for supporting patients with burns, e.g. mattresses specially adapted therefor
    • A61G7/05707Arrangements for preventing bed-sores or for supporting patients with burns, e.g. mattresses specially adapted therefor with integral, body-bearing projections or protuberances
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A47FURNITURE; DOMESTIC ARTICLES OR APPLIANCES; COFFEE MILLS; SPICE MILLS; SUCTION CLEANERS IN GENERAL
    • A47CCHAIRS; SOFAS; BEDS
    • A47C27/00Spring, stuffed or fluid mattresses or cushions specially adapted for chairs, beds or sofas
    • A47C27/002Mattress or cushion tickings or covers
    • A47C27/005Mattress or cushion tickings or covers liquid-impermeable
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A47FURNITURE; DOMESTIC ARTICLES OR APPLIANCES; COFFEE MILLS; SPICE MILLS; SUCTION CLEANERS IN GENERAL
    • A47CCHAIRS; SOFAS; BEDS
    • A47C27/00Spring, stuffed or fluid mattresses or cushions specially adapted for chairs, beds or sofas
    • A47C27/14Spring, stuffed or fluid mattresses or cushions specially adapted for chairs, beds or sofas with foamed material inlays
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A47FURNITURE; DOMESTIC ARTICLES OR APPLIANCES; COFFEE MILLS; SPICE MILLS; SUCTION CLEANERS IN GENERAL
    • A47CCHAIRS; SOFAS; BEDS
    • A47C31/00Details or accessories for chairs, beds, or the like, not provided for in other groups of this subclass, e.g. upholstery fasteners, mattress protectors, stretching devices for mattress nets
    • A47C31/10Loose or removable furniture covers
    • A47C31/105Loose or removable furniture covers for mattresses

Definitions

  • a mattress is constructed of foam having a 50% compression deflection pressure equal to the body weight of an average patient divided by his projected body area and a thickness in excess of his body depth, to prevent bedsores by providing a moldable surface which spreads support to a great area of the patients body.
  • the mattress surface supporting the patient is subdivided into a plurality of individual load bearing units to provide lateral give to the mattress.
  • a water proof cover sheet fits over the mattress and includes means for tightening the cover about the mattress to provide a firmer mattress for maneuvering the patient.
  • Decubitus ulcers or bedsores are a common problem among people who are paralyzed, in a coma, or chronically bedridden, e.g., I to of all bedridden patients develop bedsores. They are a major economic problem among individuals in the categories above and they cause great incapacitation and even death to the people who suffer from them.
  • bedsores occur over the bony protruberances of the body, such as the sacrum and shoulder blades on the posterior, the iliac crest on the anterior, the greater trochanters on the sides, the knees on the legs and the heels on the feet, i.e., areas where the skin is compressed between hard bone and a hard mattress.
  • a device for providing a soft supporting surface is the water mattress.
  • water mattresses have the disadvantage of being extremely heavy, cold, difficult to fill, prone to leakage and their softness makes it difficult to move the patient about on their surface. Further, when a patient lies in a prone position the cover of the mattress closes around his face causing the patient psychological distress and limiting his free breathing. Also, catheters, which may be attached to a patient, will not drain freely because the tube must rise to pass over the edge of the water mattress. These problems make the water mattress the least used solution to bedsores, even though it is the most effective in providing a soft surface.
  • This invention concerns a mattress which has all the desirable properties of the water mattress for the prevention of decubiti, without any of its liabilities.
  • lt consists of a mattress of a polyurethane or similar foam, having a 50 percent compression deflection pressure equal to the users weight divided by the projected area of his body in contact with the mattress and a thickness greater than the depth of his body.
  • This is an exceedingly soft foam, having an RMA firmness of 13 to 23.
  • mattresses are made with an RMA firmness of 23 to 35. If a mattress having an RMA firmness below 23, is made in the normal thickness of 4 to 6 inches, the person lying on it finds it uncomfortable because he sinks in to the point where he feels the hard supports for the mattress. On the mattress described in this invention, however, the hard support for the mattress is not felt because the person lying on it does not sink in to more than three-fourth of its depth.
  • a foam mattress having a total thickness of 12 inches may be incised in a pattern to a depth of about 4 inches to provide further softness and decrease resistance to lateral movement. If the incisions are too deep or too close together, the cut edge of the foam curls into them and forms ridges. Thus, the incisions should be about 7 inches apart. Further, no incision should be centered on the longitudinal axis of the mattress, since the patient tends to settle into such an incision thus losing the support of the mattress. It is also preferred that the incisions not reach the edge of the mattress and no incisions are necessary in the head area while the incised pattern may be smaller in the foot area. The head area is cut dowh by a depth of about 4 inches to a thickness of about 8 inches, to allow greater comfort for a patient in the prone position, to allow the neck to remain in a neutral position, and to avoid having the face buried in the mattress.
  • a notch about 7 inches wide and 6 inches deep is cut into the unincised edge of the mattress up to the incised area.
  • a catheter tube can be placed in that notch, thereby allowing it to drain freely when the patient is in the prone position.
  • the patients body sinks very deeply into the mattress, with his weight uniformly distributed over the length of his body rather than concentrated on his bony protruberances.
  • paraplegics may lie on this mattress either prone or supine for unlimited time, without exhibiting any erythema over the bony protruberances. Since erythema is the invariable precursor of decubitus ulcers, it is clear that this mattress eliminates the need to turn the patient to prevent decubiti, when the patient is in the prone or supine position and requires no pre ventative methods other than the usual appropriate good nursing practices.
  • a further aspect of the invention is a waterproof cover for the mattress, which is loose fitting and soft and pliable enough so that the patients weight is sup ported solely by the mattress and not by the cover.
  • the cover has straps attached to and extending from one side which go under the bed frame, and fasten into clamping buckles which are mounted on straps attached to the other side of the cover.
  • this cover serves two functions: It protects the foam mattress from being soiled by the patient and, by tightening the straps, the mattress may be made firm so that the patient can be easily turned or moved.
  • Tightening can be either accomplished manually or a mechanical device may be used which consists of a rod or shaft running the length of the bed, around which the straps are looped.
  • the shaft can be rotated mechanically, thereby tightening the straps and cover.
  • the straps are simply pulled tight through the clamp buckles by hand.
  • the buckles are either released manually or the shaft rotated to its normal position depending upon the tightening method.
  • the mattress as described above in accordance with the invention also serves the purpose of allowing skin grafts to heal while the patient is lying on them and contributes greatly to comfort in orthopedic and surgical cases in which localized pressure on injured tissue or bones causes discomfort. It may also aid in muscle relaxation.
  • FIG. 1 is a top view of a mattress in accordance with the invention showing the cover sheet partially removed;
  • FIG. 2 is a front view of the mattress of FIG. 1 shown in place on a hospital bed from the top end thereof showing one method of tightening the cover;
  • FIG. 3 is a bottom view showing a second method of tightening the cover.
  • a mattress I is illustrated in general which may have appropriate dimensions to serve, for example, as a hospital bed.
  • the mattress is formed of a plastic foam such as polyurethane which has known softness and resilience, The foam is chosen for its firmness so that at 50 percent deflection it will produce an upward force substantially equal to the downward force exerted by the weight of the average patient.
  • the mattress is formed of a pad of plastic foam material deeper than a patients body. e.g., 12 inches in thickness, it molds itself to the patients body thereby supporting the maximum area of his body and relieving the usual supporting surfaces, such as the sacrum, hips and heels, iliac crest and knees.
  • the mattress should have a 50 percent deflection firmness of 0.65 to 1.2 psi, which corresponds to an initial Rubber Manufacturers Association firmness value of 13 to 23. Such a foam will soften in use to correct values of firmness.
  • the mattress 10 is subdivided into a plurality of load bearing units 12 which may be squares having an edge dimension of 7 inches. These square are defined by incisions 14 formed in the upward surface of mattress it which, in turn, may be approximately 4 inches deep.
  • the load bearing units 12 have lateral give, due to the incisions l4, and thus when a patients body moves latorally the shearing effect between his skin and tissues caused by the frictional resistance of the supporting surface to lateral movement is greatly reduced.
  • the incisions 14 would produce a structural weakness if continued to the sides of mattress 10, the incisions stop before all side areas 16 of the mattress.
  • a notch 43 at least 6 inches wide and 6 inches deep is cut into the side area extending at. the way to the incised area (on each side of the mattress 10). These notches form a path for the catheter tube, thereby allowing the cather tube to drain freely when the patient is in the prone position. Further. to prevent the tendency of a patient to fall into a slit arranged along the central axis of mattress 10, there is no longitudinal slit along the length of axis 18.
  • the head area 21 of the mattress 10 as shown in FIGS. 1 and 2 is cut down across the entire width of the mattress 10 to a depth of about 4 inches. This leaves a thinner section of 8 inches of the mattress at the head area 21 and allows the patients neck to be in a neutral position when he is lying prone. preventing his head from being sunken into the mattress, as it is in a water mattress.
  • a cover 24 of waterproof soft material such as 1.1 ounces per square yard of ripstop nylon coated with polyurethane, vinyl or rubber.
  • the cover 24 extends beyond all the edges of mattress 10 so that when the patient sinks deeply into the mattress the cover is not drawn tight on the mattress.
  • straps 26 are attached at intervals of, for example. 10 inches. along one edge of the cover starting 18 inches from the head of the mattress. and registering straps 28 having buckles .30 are arranged at the corresponding places at the other side of the cover.
  • the straps 26 and 28 may be arranged under the side rails 32A and 32B of a hospital bed 34 and drawn together with buckles 30 to provide a firmer surface 36 upon which a patient may be more easily turned for bathing.
  • the straps 26 may be alternatively wrapped around a shaft 38 as shown in FIG. 3.
  • Shaft 38 may be rotated by hand crank 40 shown in FIG. 2 or by other known means such an electric motor 41 and transmission 42 shown in FIG. 3.
  • a mattress for the prevention of bed sores in a user cinnprising a unitary member made of resilient foam having a. thickness greater than the thickness of an average users body and having load-bearing properties wherein a 50 percent compression deflection pressure is substantially equal to the user's body weight divided by his body area in contact with the mattress, said mattress being subdivided upon its surface into a plurality of individual load-bearing units whereby said mattress absorbs the downward weight and lateral movement of the user's body to protect said users body from contact with hard surfaces and from localized high pressure over the bony protuberances, a cover of flexible, waterproof and soft but strong fabric which is sized to cover the top and overlap, all edges of said mattress which is loose enough that it is not pulled tight when the user sinks deeply into the mattress, means for drawing at least two opposed edges of the cover tightly about the mattress so that the mattress is rendered firm enough to easily move a patient disposed thereupon, said drawing means includes a plurality of
  • a mattress for the prevention of bed sores on a user comprising a unitary member made of resilient foam, having a thickness greater than the thickness of an average users body and having load-bearing properties wherein a 50 percent comparison deflection pressure is substantially equal to the user's body weight divided by his body area in contact with the foam, said foam absorbing and distributing the downward weight of the user's body by allowing the body to sink deeply into the foam and avoiding localized high pressure being applied to body protuberances, and means for lifting the user's body lying on the foam including a cover of pliable material which rests on the surface of the foam beneath the users body without being secured to the foam and being loose enough so that it is not pulled tight when the user sinks deeply into the foam, said user being supported solely by the foam during use, and means attached to the cover for drawing at least two opposed edges of the cover apart to make the cover taut while the user is disposed thereupon without applying any force to the foam beneath the user to easily move the user sunk in the foam.
  • said drawing means comprises a plurality of straps affixed to one edge of said cover and a plurality of buckles coupled to an opposed edge of said cover.
  • said cover tautening means includes a plurality of straps and means for tightening the straps.
  • said strap tightening means including a shaft and means for rotating said shaft.

Abstract

A mattress is constructed of foam having a 50% compression deflection pressure equal to the body weight of an average patient divided by his projected body area and a thickness in excess of his body depth, to prevent bedsores by providing a moldable surface which spreads support to a great area of the patient''s body. The mattress surface supporting the patient is subdivided into a plurality of individual load bearing units to provide lateral give to the mattress. A water proof cover sheet fits over the mattress and includes means for tightening the cover about the mattress to provide a firmer mattress for maneuvering the patient.

Description

United States Patent 11 1 Blair 1 MATTRESS FOR PREVENTING BEDSORES [75] Inventor: E. Allan Blair, Princeton, NJ.
[73] Assignee: Medic-Ease Corporation, Princeton,
[22] Filed: Mar. 29, 1972 [21] Appl. No.: 239,219
[451 July 8,1975
7/1970 Cohen 5/361 B 4/1971 Weinstein 5/348 5 7 ABSTRACT A mattress is constructed of foam having a 50% compression deflection pressure equal to the body weight of an average patient divided by his projected body area and a thickness in excess of his body depth, to prevent bedsores by providing a moldable surface which spreads support to a great area of the patients body. The mattress surface supporting the patient is subdivided into a plurality of individual load bearing units to provide lateral give to the mattress. A water proof cover sheet fits over the mattress and includes means for tightening the cover about the mattress to provide a firmer mattress for maneuvering the patient.
8 Claims, 3 Drawing Figures 1 MATTRESS FOR PREVENTING BEDSORES BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 1. Field of the Invention This invention relates to a mattress for preventing the formation of decubitus ulcers or bedsores as they are popularly known.
2. Description of the Prior Art Decubitus ulcers or bedsores are a common problem among people who are paralyzed, in a coma, or chronically bedridden, e.g., I to of all bedridden patients develop bedsores. They are a major economic problem among individuals in the categories above and they cause great incapacitation and even death to the people who suffer from them. Generally, bedsores occur over the bony protruberances of the body, such as the sacrum and shoulder blades on the posterior, the iliac crest on the anterior, the greater trochanters on the sides, the knees on the legs and the heels on the feet, i.e., areas where the skin is compressed between hard bone and a hard mattress.
Many methods have been used to treat or prevent bedsores. Turning the patient every 2 hours to allow reestablishment of circulation over the bony protruberances is generally used, but this method increases the work load of the nursing staff and interrupts the patients rest. Furthermore, in some cases it is not possible to turn a patient because of specific injuries. Sheepskins are often used to allow ventilation and minimize pressure but this creates severe cleaning problems, since the decubitus ulcers often bleed or drain, and patients who have them are often incontinent. This means that the sheepskins must be laundered frequently and they are very difficult to launder.
Other devices attempt to alleviate bedsores. One such device is an air-mattress in which the air pressure is applied alternately to adjacent tubes. This transfers the pressure from one spot to another allowing circulation to be reestablished. This method has the disadvantage of requiring a device for providing an alternating air supply.
A device for providing a soft supporting surface is the water mattress. However, water mattresses have the disadvantage of being extremely heavy, cold, difficult to fill, prone to leakage and their softness makes it difficult to move the patient about on their surface. Further, when a patient lies in a prone position the cover of the mattress closes around his face causing the patient psychological distress and limiting his free breathing. Also, catheters, which may be attached to a patient, will not drain freely because the tube must rise to pass over the edge of the water mattress. These problems make the water mattress the least used solution to bedsores, even though it is the most effective in providing a soft surface.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION This invention concerns a mattress which has all the desirable properties of the water mattress for the prevention of decubiti, without any of its liabilities. lt consists of a mattress of a polyurethane or similar foam, having a 50 percent compression deflection pressure equal to the users weight divided by the projected area of his body in contact with the mattress and a thickness greater than the depth of his body. This is an exceedingly soft foam, having an RMA firmness of 13 to 23.
Normally, mattresses are made with an RMA firmness of 23 to 35. If a mattress having an RMA firmness below 23, is made in the normal thickness of 4 to 6 inches, the person lying on it finds it uncomfortable because he sinks in to the point where he feels the hard supports for the mattress. On the mattress described in this invention, however, the hard support for the mattress is not felt because the person lying on it does not sink in to more than three-fourth of its depth.
A foam mattress having a total thickness of 12 inches may be incised in a pattern to a depth of about 4 inches to provide further softness and decrease resistance to lateral movement. If the incisions are too deep or too close together, the cut edge of the foam curls into them and forms ridges. Thus, the incisions should be about 7 inches apart. Further, no incision should be centered on the longitudinal axis of the mattress, since the patient tends to settle into such an incision thus losing the support of the mattress. It is also preferred that the incisions not reach the edge of the mattress and no incisions are necessary in the head area while the incised pattern may be smaller in the foot area. The head area is cut dowh by a depth of about 4 inches to a thickness of about 8 inches, to allow greater comfort for a patient in the prone position, to allow the neck to remain in a neutral position, and to avoid having the face buried in the mattress.
At the area of the hips, a notch about 7 inches wide and 6 inches deep is cut into the unincised edge of the mattress up to the incised area. A catheter tube can be placed in that notch, thereby allowing it to drain freely when the patient is in the prone position.
Such changes in the surface of the mattress as the cut-out head and catheter tube channels cannot be made on a water mattress.
With such a mattress, in accordance with the invention, the patients body sinks very deeply into the mattress, with his weight uniformly distributed over the length of his body rather than concentrated on his bony protruberances. Thus, paraplegics may lie on this mattress either prone or supine for unlimited time, without exhibiting any erythema over the bony protruberances. Since erythema is the invariable precursor of decubitus ulcers, it is clear that this mattress eliminates the need to turn the patient to prevent decubiti, when the patient is in the prone or supine position and requires no pre ventative methods other than the usual appropriate good nursing practices.
A further aspect of the invention is a waterproof cover for the mattress, which is loose fitting and soft and pliable enough so that the patients weight is sup ported solely by the mattress and not by the cover. The cover has straps attached to and extending from one side which go under the bed frame, and fasten into clamping buckles which are mounted on straps attached to the other side of the cover. Thus, this cover serves two functions: It protects the foam mattress from being soiled by the patient and, by tightening the straps, the mattress may be made firm so that the patient can be easily turned or moved.
Tightening can be either accomplished manually or a mechanical device may be used which consists of a rod or shaft running the length of the bed, around which the straps are looped. The shaft can be rotated mechanically, thereby tightening the straps and cover. For manual operation, the straps are simply pulled tight through the clamp buckles by hand.
To loosen the cover again so that the mattress recovers its normal softness, the buckles are either released manually or the shaft rotated to its normal position depending upon the tightening method.
The mattress as described above in accordance with the invention also serves the purpose of allowing skin grafts to heal while the patient is lying on them and contributes greatly to comfort in orthopedic and surgical cases in which localized pressure on injured tissue or bones causes discomfort. It may also aid in muscle relaxation.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS The preferred embodiment of the applicant's inven tion will now be described with reference to the drawings in which:
FIG. 1 is a top view of a mattress in accordance with the invention showing the cover sheet partially removed;
FIG. 2 is a front view of the mattress of FIG. 1 shown in place on a hospital bed from the top end thereof showing one method of tightening the cover; and
FIG. 3 is a bottom view showing a second method of tightening the cover.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS Referring to FIG. 1, a mattress I is illustrated in general which may have appropriate dimensions to serve, for example, as a hospital bed. The mattress is formed of a plastic foam such as polyurethane which has known softness and resilience, The foam is chosen for its firmness so that at 50 percent deflection it will produce an upward force substantially equal to the downward force exerted by the weight of the average patient. Moreover. since the mattress is formed of a pad of plastic foam material deeper than a patients body. e.g., 12 inches in thickness, it molds itself to the patients body thereby supporting the maximum area of his body and relieving the usual supporting surfaces, such as the sacrum, hips and heels, iliac crest and knees. from supporting the entire body weight. For an average patient having a body weight of 150 pounds, and a body area in contact with the mattress of 500 square inches which average weight and body dimensions are provided in the publication The Measure of Man. Human Factors in Design" by Henry Dreyfuss, 2d ed. pub. 1967 by The Whitney Library of Design, 18 East 50th St., New York, NY. 10022, for an average pressure of about 0.3 psi exerted by the body, the mattress should have a 50 percent deflection firmness of 0.65 to 1.2 psi, which corresponds to an initial Rubber Manufacturers Association firmness value of 13 to 23. Such a foam will soften in use to correct values of firmness.
The above mentioned foam is not used in conventional mattresses since it is found that in the conventional range of mattress thickness, 4 6 inches, a firmer foam is necessary to avoid contact between the mattress users body and the supporting surface for the mattress.
The mattress 10 is subdivided into a plurality of load bearing units 12 which may be squares having an edge dimension of 7 inches. These square are defined by incisions 14 formed in the upward surface of mattress it which, in turn, may be approximately 4 inches deep. The load bearing units 12 have lateral give, due to the incisions l4, and thus when a patients body moves latorally the shearing effect between his skin and tissues caused by the frictional resistance of the supporting surface to lateral movement is greatly reduced.
Since the incisions 14 would produce a structural weakness if continued to the sides of mattress 10, the incisions stop before all side areas 16 of the mattress. At the level of the hips a notch 43 at least 6 inches wide and 6 inches deep is cut into the side area extending at. the way to the incised area (on each side of the mattress 10). These notches form a path for the catheter tube, thereby allowing the cather tube to drain freely when the patient is in the prone position. Further. to prevent the tendency of a patient to fall into a slit arranged along the central axis of mattress 10, there is no longitudinal slit along the length of axis 18.
The feet of a bed ridden patient under the heels due to the high pressures caused by body movements, are particularly subject to the shearing effect described above. Thus, in region 20 which corresponds to the foot of mattress 10, a smaller grid pattern is formed having square load bearing units 22 with an edge dimension of about 3% inches. Further. since bedsores are rarely a problem on the head. the grid pattern at the head area 21 may be discontinued without harm to the invention.
The head area 21 of the mattress 10 as shown in FIGS. 1 and 2 is cut down across the entire width of the mattress 10 to a depth of about 4 inches. This leaves a thinner section of 8 inches of the mattress at the head area 21 and allows the patients neck to be in a neutral position when he is lying prone. preventing his head from being sunken into the mattress, as it is in a water mattress.
'Ihe mattress 10 described above is covered by a cover 24 of waterproof soft material such as 1.1 ounces per square yard of ripstop nylon coated with polyurethane, vinyl or rubber. As can be seen in FIG. 1, the cover 24 extends beyond all the edges of mattress 10 so that when the patient sinks deeply into the mattress the cover is not drawn tight on the mattress. In addition, straps 26 are attached at intervals of, for example. 10 inches. along one edge of the cover starting 18 inches from the head of the mattress. and registering straps 28 having buckles .30 are arranged at the corresponding places at the other side of the cover.
As is seen in FIG. 2, the straps 26 and 28 may be arranged under the side rails 32A and 32B of a hospital bed 34 and drawn together with buckles 30 to provide a firmer surface 36 upon which a patient may be more easily turned for bathing. The straps 26 may be alternatively wrapped around a shaft 38 as shown in FIG. 3. Thus. by rotating shaft 38 all the straps 26 may be tight ened or loosened in unison. Shaft 38 may be rotated by hand crank 40 shown in FIG. 2 or by other known means such an electric motor 41 and transmission 42 shown in FIG. 3.
While the above description fully covers the preferred embodiments of the applicants invention, many modifications may be made within the scope of this invention. Thus. for example. the surface of mattress l0 Jl'tjf, .ic contoured to fit a patients body.
' rot is claimed is: i. t mattress for the prevention of bed sores in a user cinnprising a unitary member made of resilient foam having a. thickness greater than the thickness of an average users body and having load-bearing properties wherein a 50 percent compression deflection pressure is substantially equal to the user's body weight divided by his body area in contact with the mattress, said mattress being subdivided upon its surface into a plurality of individual load-bearing units whereby said mattress absorbs the downward weight and lateral movement of the user's body to protect said users body from contact with hard surfaces and from localized high pressure over the bony protuberances, a cover of flexible, waterproof and soft but strong fabric which is sized to cover the top and overlap, all edges of said mattress which is loose enough that it is not pulled tight when the user sinks deeply into the mattress, means for drawing at least two opposed edges of the cover tightly about the mattress so that the mattress is rendered firm enough to easily move a patient disposed thereupon, said drawing means includes a plurality of straps affixed to one edge of said cover and a plurality of buckles affixed to an opposed edge of said cover, said straps being extended thereunder, a shaft disposed beneath said mattress, said straps being wrapped about said shaft and means for rotating said shaft whereby the tension upon said straps may be adjusted in unison.
2. The mattress recited in claim 1 wherein said rotating means includes an electric motor.
3. A mattress for the prevention of bed sores on a user comprising a unitary member made of resilient foam, having a thickness greater than the thickness of an average users body and having load-bearing properties wherein a 50 percent comparison deflection pressure is substantially equal to the user's body weight divided by his body area in contact with the foam, said foam absorbing and distributing the downward weight of the user's body by allowing the body to sink deeply into the foam and avoiding localized high pressure being applied to body protuberances, and means for lifting the user's body lying on the foam including a cover of pliable material which rests on the surface of the foam beneath the users body without being secured to the foam and being loose enough so that it is not pulled tight when the user sinks deeply into the foam, said user being supported solely by the foam during use, and means attached to the cover for drawing at least two opposed edges of the cover apart to make the cover taut while the user is disposed thereupon without applying any force to the foam beneath the user to easily move the user sunk in the foam.
4. The mattress recited in claim 3 wherein said drawing means comprises a plurality of straps affixed to one edge of said cover and a plurality of buckles coupled to an opposed edge of said cover.
5. The mattress recited in claim 3 wherein said cover is waterproof, soft but strong fabric.
6. The mattress recited in claim 3, wherein said cover tautening means includes a plurality of straps and means for tightening the straps.
7. The mattress recited in claim 6 wherein said strap tightening means including a shaft and means for rotating said shaft.
8. The mattress recited in claim 6 wherein said cover tautening means further includes buckles, said straps being extended under said foam.

Claims (8)

1. A mattress for the prevention of bed sores in a user comprising a unitary member made of resilient foam having a thickness greater than the thickness of an average user''s body and having load-bearing properties wherein a 50 percent compression deflection pressure is substantially equal to the user''s body weight divided by his body area in contact with the mattress, said mattress being subdivided upon its surface into a plurality of individual load-bearing units whereby said mattress absorbs the downward weight and lateral movement of the user''s body to protect said user''s body from contact with hard surfaces and from localized high pressure over the bony protuberances, a cover of flexible, waterproof and soft but strong fabric which is sized to cover the top and overlap, all edges of said mattress which is loose enough that it is not pulled tight when the user sinks deeply into the mattress, means for drawing at least two opposed edges of the cover tightly about the mattress so that the mattress is rendered firm enough to easily move a patient disposed thereupon, said drawing means includes a plurality of straps affixed to one edge of said cover and a plurality of buckleS affixed to an opposed edge of said cover, said straps being extended thereunder, a shaft disposed beneath said mattress, said straps being wrapped about said shaft and means for rotating said shaft whereby the tension upon said straps may be adjusted in unison.
2. The mattress recited in claim 1 wherein said rotating means includes an electric motor.
3. A mattress for the prevention of bed sores on a user comprising a unitary member made of resilient foam, having a thickness greater than the thickness of an average user''s body and having load-bearing properties wherein a 50 percent comparison deflection pressure is substantially equal to the user''s body weight divided by his body area in contact with the foam, said foam absorbing and distributing the downward weight of the user''s body by allowing the body to sink deeply into the foam and avoiding localized high pressure being applied to body protuberances, and means for lifting the user''s body lying on the foam including a cover of pliable material which rests on the surface of the foam beneath the user''s body without being secured to the foam and being loose enough so that it is not pulled tight when the user sinks deeply into the foam, said user being supported solely by the foam during use, and means attached to the cover for drawing at least two opposed edges of the cover apart to make the cover taut while the user is disposed thereupon without applying any force to the foam beneath the user to easily move the user sunk in the foam.
4. The mattress recited in claim 3 wherein said drawing means comprises a plurality of straps affixed to one edge of said cover and a plurality of buckles coupled to an opposed edge of said cover.
5. The mattress recited in claim 3 wherein said cover is waterproof, soft but strong fabric.
6. The mattress recited in claim 3, wherein said cover tautening means includes a plurality of straps and means for tightening the straps.
7. The mattress recited in claim 6 wherein said strap tightening means including a shaft and means for rotating said shaft.
8. The mattress recited in claim 6 wherein said cover tautening means further includes buckles, said straps being extended under said foam.
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US4042987A (en) * 1976-04-16 1977-08-23 Ronald J. P. Evans Resilient support
US4137583A (en) * 1976-09-30 1979-02-06 Baldwin/Green Inc. Gymnastic mat
US4336621A (en) * 1980-02-25 1982-06-29 Schwartz Donald R Disposable orthopedic overmattress for articulated beds
US4843663A (en) * 1983-08-15 1989-07-04 Juro Horvat Inflatible mattress with adjustable internal partitions
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US5063625A (en) * 1989-04-10 1991-11-12 Perry Leroy R Adjustable tensioning of a mattress
US5101527A (en) * 1990-10-29 1992-04-07 Convo Corporation Modular body support system
US5201780A (en) * 1991-09-06 1993-04-13 Jay Medical, Ltd. Anti-decubitus mattress pad
US5345629A (en) * 1988-03-23 1994-09-13 American Life Support Technology Patient support system
US5549743A (en) * 1993-06-22 1996-08-27 Genesis Composites, L.C. Composite microsphere and lubricant mixture
US5749111A (en) * 1996-02-14 1998-05-12 Teksource, Lc Gelatinous cushions with buckling columns
US5829081A (en) * 1993-11-09 1998-11-03 Teksource, Lc Cushioning device formed from separate reshapable cells
US5881409A (en) * 1993-06-22 1999-03-16 Teksource, Ll Puff-quilted bladders for containing flowable cushioning medium
US6272705B1 (en) 2000-07-14 2001-08-14 Wilma Fay Jones Bed frame for invalids
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US7340788B1 (en) * 2006-04-18 2008-03-11 Traub Christine M Method to improve the firmness of a pillowtop mattress
US20100154125A1 (en) * 2008-12-19 2010-06-24 Fernando Fratovich Apparatus and Method for Compressing a Mattress to a Uniform Firmness
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US7789560B2 (en) 2001-10-30 2010-09-07 Loma Linda University Medical Center Method and device for delivering radiotherapy
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US20100223730A1 (en) * 2008-10-03 2010-09-09 Edizone, Llc Cushions comprising core structures having joiner ribs and related methods
US8210899B2 (en) 2006-11-21 2012-07-03 Loma Linda University Medical Center Device and method for immobilizing patients for breast radiation therapy
US8424137B1 (en) 2007-11-27 2013-04-23 Edizone, Llc Ribbed gel
US8434748B1 (en) 2007-10-03 2013-05-07 Edizone, Llc Cushions comprising gel springs
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US10238561B2 (en) 2017-06-22 2019-03-26 Piyush Sheth System and method for treating and preventing pressure sores in bedridden patients
US10245197B2 (en) 2017-06-22 2019-04-02 Piyush Sheth System and method for treating and preventing pressure sores in bedridden patients
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US20220192905A1 (en) * 2016-09-02 2022-06-23 Strker Corporation Patient support systems with a chair configuration and a stowable foot section
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US4137583A (en) * 1976-09-30 1979-02-06 Baldwin/Green Inc. Gymnastic mat
US4336621A (en) * 1980-02-25 1982-06-29 Schwartz Donald R Disposable orthopedic overmattress for articulated beds
US4843663A (en) * 1983-08-15 1989-07-04 Juro Horvat Inflatible mattress with adjustable internal partitions
US5345629A (en) * 1988-03-23 1994-09-13 American Life Support Technology Patient support system
US6941598B2 (en) 1988-03-23 2005-09-13 Hill-Rom Services, Inc. Patient care system
US4905267A (en) * 1988-04-29 1990-02-27 Loma Linda University Medical Center Method of assembly and whole body, patient positioning and repositioning support for use in radiation beam therapy systems
US5063625A (en) * 1989-04-10 1991-11-12 Perry Leroy R Adjustable tensioning of a mattress
US5101527A (en) * 1990-10-29 1992-04-07 Convo Corporation Modular body support system
US5303436A (en) * 1991-09-06 1994-04-19 Jay Medical, Ltd. Anti-decubing mattress pad
US5255404A (en) * 1991-09-06 1993-10-26 Jay Medical, Ltd. Anti-decubitus mattress pad
US5511260A (en) * 1991-09-06 1996-04-30 Rik Medical Anti-decubitus mattress pad
US5201780A (en) * 1991-09-06 1993-04-13 Jay Medical, Ltd. Anti-decubitus mattress pad
US5549743A (en) * 1993-06-22 1996-08-27 Genesis Composites, L.C. Composite microsphere and lubricant mixture
US5881409A (en) * 1993-06-22 1999-03-16 Teksource, Ll Puff-quilted bladders for containing flowable cushioning medium
US6020055A (en) * 1993-06-22 2000-02-01 Teksource, Lc Cushioning media including lubricated spherical objects
US6197099B1 (en) 1993-06-22 2001-03-06 Tony M. Pearce Flowable cushioning media including lubricated spherical objects
US5829081A (en) * 1993-11-09 1998-11-03 Teksource, Lc Cushioning device formed from separate reshapable cells
US6026527A (en) * 1996-02-14 2000-02-22 Edizone, Lc Gelatinous cushions with buckling columns
US5749111A (en) * 1996-02-14 1998-05-12 Teksource, Lc Gelatinous cushions with buckling columns
US6272705B1 (en) 2000-07-14 2001-08-14 Wilma Fay Jones Bed frame for invalids
US8376613B2 (en) 2001-10-30 2013-02-19 Loma Linda University Medical Center Method and device for delivering radiotherapy
US8083408B2 (en) 2001-10-30 2011-12-27 Loma Linda University Medical Center Method and device for delivering radiotherapy
US7789560B2 (en) 2001-10-30 2010-09-07 Loma Linda University Medical Center Method and device for delivering radiotherapy
US7949096B2 (en) 2003-08-12 2011-05-24 Loma Linda University Medical Center Path planning and collision avoidance for movement of instruments in a radiation therapy environment
US20110218679A1 (en) * 2003-08-12 2011-09-08 Loma Linda University Medical Center Path planning and collision avoidance for movement of instruments in a radiation therapy environment
US8418288B2 (en) 2003-08-12 2013-04-16 Loma Linda University Medical Center Modular patient support system
US7746978B2 (en) 2003-08-12 2010-06-29 Loma Linda University Medical Center Path planning and collision avoidance for movement of instruments in a radiation therapy environment
US8269195B2 (en) 2003-08-12 2012-09-18 Loma Linda University Medical Center Patient alignment system with external measurement and object coordination for radiation therapy system
US8184773B2 (en) 2003-08-12 2012-05-22 Loma Linda University Medical Center Path planning and collision avoidance for movement of instruments in a radiation therapy environment
US8981324B2 (en) 2003-08-12 2015-03-17 Loma Linda University Medical Center Patient alignment system with external measurement and object coordination for radiation therapy system
US8569720B2 (en) 2003-08-12 2013-10-29 Loma Linda University Medical Center Patient alignment system with external measurement and object coordination for radiation therapy system
US8093569B2 (en) 2003-08-12 2012-01-10 Loma Linda University Medical Centre Modular patient support system
US20080042076A1 (en) * 2003-08-12 2008-02-21 Loma Linda University Medical Center Modular patient support system
US7696499B2 (en) 2003-08-12 2010-04-13 Loma Linda University Medical Center Modular patient support system
US7127763B1 (en) * 2004-04-30 2006-10-31 Halo Innovations, Inc. Crib mattress safety features
US7984715B2 (en) 2004-06-25 2011-07-26 Loma Linda University Medical Center Method and device for registration and immobilization
US20070039621A1 (en) * 2004-06-25 2007-02-22 Moyers Michael F Method and device for registration and immobilization
US8479743B2 (en) 2004-06-25 2013-07-09 Loma Linda University Medical Center Method and device for registration and immobilization
US7340788B1 (en) * 2006-04-18 2008-03-11 Traub Christine M Method to improve the firmness of a pillowtop mattress
US8523630B2 (en) 2006-11-21 2013-09-03 Loma Linda University Medical Center Device and method for immobilizing patients for breast radiation therapy
US8210899B2 (en) 2006-11-21 2012-07-03 Loma Linda University Medical Center Device and method for immobilizing patients for breast radiation therapy
US9084886B2 (en) 2006-11-21 2015-07-21 Loma Linda University Medical Center Device and method for immobilizing patients for breast radiation therapy
US8075981B2 (en) 2007-08-23 2011-12-13 Edizone, Llc Alternating pattern gel cushioning elements and related methods
US20100183847A1 (en) * 2007-08-23 2010-07-22 Pearce Tony M Alternating pattern gel cushioning elements and related methods
US8434748B1 (en) 2007-10-03 2013-05-07 Edizone, Llc Cushions comprising gel springs
US8424137B1 (en) 2007-11-27 2013-04-23 Edizone, Llc Ribbed gel
US20100229308A1 (en) * 2008-10-03 2010-09-16 Edizone, Llc Cushions comprising core structures and related methods
US20100223730A1 (en) * 2008-10-03 2010-09-09 Edizone, Llc Cushions comprising core structures having joiner ribs and related methods
US8628067B2 (en) 2008-10-03 2014-01-14 Edizone, Llc Cushions comprising core structures and related methods
US8932692B2 (en) 2008-10-03 2015-01-13 Edizone, Llc Cushions comprising deformable members and related methods
US20100227091A1 (en) * 2008-10-03 2010-09-09 Edizone, Llc Cushions comprising deformable members and related methods
US20100154125A1 (en) * 2008-12-19 2010-06-24 Fernando Fratovich Apparatus and Method for Compressing a Mattress to a Uniform Firmness
US9085366B2 (en) * 2010-12-23 2015-07-21 Airbus Operations Gmbh Device for lying or sitting on
US20130291307A1 (en) * 2010-12-23 2013-11-07 Airbus Operations Gmbh Device for lying or sitting on
US9149402B2 (en) 2011-08-16 2015-10-06 Ecolab Usa Inc. Cover for patient transfer devices
US20200016016A1 (en) * 2011-11-22 2020-01-16 Paramount Bed Co., Ltd. Bed device
US10893992B2 (en) * 2011-11-22 2021-01-19 Paramount Bed Co., Ltd. Bed device
US20220192905A1 (en) * 2016-09-02 2022-06-23 Strker Corporation Patient support systems with a chair configuration and a stowable foot section
DE202016106879U1 (en) * 2016-12-09 2018-03-12 Ulrich Gaupp Mattress with variable hardness adjustment
US10238561B2 (en) 2017-06-22 2019-03-26 Piyush Sheth System and method for treating and preventing pressure sores in bedridden patients
US10245197B2 (en) 2017-06-22 2019-04-02 Piyush Sheth System and method for treating and preventing pressure sores in bedridden patients
US11464345B2 (en) * 2018-06-25 2022-10-11 Starsprings Ab Firmness controlling apparatus for a bed or seating arrangement

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