Skip navigation View an alternate layout of this website with limited styles and no horizontal scrolling
Menu
Skip to Related Links

LADDER TO ASSIST GETTING OUT OF BATH     

Return to Search Results

Record 23 of 40.

« Previous Product     Next Product »      


0 consumer reviews. Login to rate this product.

--- CUSTOM ADAPTATION --- PURPOSE: To provide a customized bracket and ladder system for use in getting in and out of the bath unaided for a person with mobility disabilities. A bracket is mounted on a stainless steel plate, and a fixed stainless steel tube is welded onto the plate. A smaller diameter inner tube with a 500 millimeter (mm) long piece of tube is welded at 90 degrees, creating an L-shape that sits in the outer tube and rotates from flush against the wall to 90 degrees from the wall. Hanging from two rings bolted through the horizontal section of the L is a ladder made of synthetic rope with a load rating of up to 100 kilograms (kg), and 30 mm diameter hardwood rungs at 125 mm intervals. The ladder descends to 1200 mm above the base of the tub and enables an individual to pull him- or herself up to sit on the ledge at the end of the bath in order get out. In order to prevent the horizontal arm from moving when weight is on it, a slot was cut in the outer tube and a band was connected the inner tube with a vertical piece corresponding to the slot welded on. The ladder is kept at the right height by the band and is locked in place by the vertical piece. TITLE: Getting out of the Bath. JOURNAL: TAD Journal. REF: Volume 28, Number 2, July 2008, p. 7. Pages: 2 (including cover).

Notes: The TAD Journal is available in the collection of the National Rehabilitation Information Center (NARIC).

Price: Contact manufacturer.

This product record was updated on November 14, 2008.

This product is available from:

Manufacturer:

Technical Aid to the Disabled (TAD)

TADNSW is a charity organisation that has the authority to fundraise. TAD uses volunteers dedicated to the design, construction and provision of aids for people with disabilities. Members of TAD provide a resource pool comprising a range of design, engineering, rehabilitation, computer, therapy and other professional and technical skills. Aids custom-designed by TAD volunteers are described in the TAD Journal.

Locked Bag 2008
Wentworthville, New South Wales 2145
Australia
Telephone: 011-61-2-9912-3400.
Fax: 011-61-2-9890-1911.
Web: http://www.tadnsw.org.au.
Email: tad@tadnsw.org.au.


Link to more products from Technical Aid to the Disabled (TAD)

« Previous Product     Next Product »      
Return to Search Results

Record 23 of 40.


View discontinued Products (15)

AbleData, 8630 Fenton Street, Suite 930, Silver Spring, MD 20910. 1-800-227-0216.
Maintained for the National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research of the U.S. Dept. of Education
by ICF Macro under Contract No. ED-04-CO-0018/0007.

The records in AbleData are provided for information purposes only. Neither the U.S. Department of Education nor ICF Macro has examined, reviewed, or tested any product, device, or information contained in AbleData. The Department and ICF Macro make no endorsement, representation, or warranty express or implied as to any product, device, or information set forth in AbleData. The views expressed on this site do not necessarily represent the opinions of the Department of Education, the National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research, or ICF Macro.