Follow
Share

They can elevate, recline, tilt, etc. They have attendant controls in the rear for the caregiver to use. I wondered if they would be useful. I already have a Hoyer lift, sit-to-stand and ceiling lifts. The power chair would be used for field trips in a handicap ramp van and for moving around the house, transferring to bed, toilet, reclining lift chair, etc.

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
My husband has a $49,000 custom built power chair that right now is sitting outside the master bedroom door and hasn’t been used for 3 weeks. The last time we used it, he made it out the door (barely), and down the ramp, I used the portable Hoyer to get him in my car and all was well. But when we came back home, we couldn’t get the chair back up the ramp. I am convinced he was steering it wrong. He kept hitting the side rails of the ramp. I wish I’d known about the caregiver controls because I had to push him (300#) and the chair (400#) up the ramp. It was a total disaster. He was supposed to be trained by the OT on how to operate the chair but the OT required a doctor’s order. He would have had to know how to operate the chair to get to the doctor in the first place and wouldn’t have needed the OT. Made no sense.

The way hubby panicked when the chair wouldn’t go up the ramp, if he had dementia it would ha e been much worse.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

I would be concerned about safety. My dad doesn't have dementia and we've had a few minor "oopsies" with his power chair, with both him and my sibling and I operating it. Even customized for his relatively small size (he's 5 feet 6 inches and slim/average weight), his chair weighs over 300 pounds. When it is in motion, it is powerful. I've learned the hard way not to multitask when driving it. I almost took a toenail off once when I was maneuvering it in our van!
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter