It's a stretcher ... It's a table ... It's a recliner ... It's a stretcher chair!
Stretcher chairs are the Swiss Army knives of surgery. With the push of a button on a motorized model with remote-control operation, you can raise, lower and tilt the chair's back, legs and height, taking patients from supine to upright and
every sitting and lying position in between, even Trendelenburg. Gone is the need for your surgeons to adjust table height, and for your staff to lift and transfer patients to a different surface. We've programmed our fleet of 4 chairs
to the exact height needed, per station, throughout our 2-OR suite: positions for pre-op, transport, surgery and post-op. Staff simply push a button for programmed position 1, 2, 3 or 4, and then hang the remote on a hook on the chair's
arm rest.
- puts the chair into a semi Fowler's position to administer drops and let patients dilate in comfort.
- puts patients into the physician-desired height for bladeless cataract treatments in OR 1.
- positions patients for phaco in OR 2.
- returns patients to semi Fowler's, the proper position for recovery and transfer to PACU.
Staff know which programmable button to hit as they're wheeling patients, and the surgeon knows that patients are right where he needs them to be when he arrives in the laser room.
From a logistical standpoint, stretcher chairs help maximize patient flow and throughput. They're easy to maneuver so you can wheel patients to the ideal locations to perform a task. The inherent limitations of traditional chairs can force
you to, let's say, dilate patients in one area and have the surgeon mark patients in a different location.
In the 7-plus years that we've had our stretcher chairs, we've had no mechanical or service repair issues. We paid around $15,000 for each chair, but for a repetitive procedure like cataract surgery, not having to adjust the chair height
dozens of times a day saves valuable turnover time, and streamlines the surgical process and patient flow.
To justify the cost, take into account that the stretcher chairs will replace a certain number of stretchers and recliners. You'll also save on nursing time, and experience fewer staff and patient injuries.