HILL ROM TOTAL CARE IP 19000-ADVANTA-ADVANCE

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Hill-Rom engineers designed the TotalCare® bariatric bed to provide greater security where needed. His long list of resources is designed to help protect the caregiver and the patient from injury, while improving staff efficiency. Functions as well as other bariatric bed beds TotalCare®, but it is different - the TotalCare® Bariatric Bed has been reinforced and designed specifically for the bariatric patient to help ensure the safety, comfort and patient movement.
Large balcony Sleep - Four inches wider than standard bed TotalCare® and three inches wider than our bed Magnum® II, bariatric bed TotalCare® provides a broad platform for patient transportation and unrestricted comfort.
Position the patient FullChair® Mechanism - Caregivers can easily and frequently positioned patients immobilized by medical and nursing "up-in-chair" orders earlier, throughout clinical course of the patient with the touch of a button.
FullChair® President Egress Position Mechanism - This simple mechanism facilitates the foot-bed or egress side reducing the risk of injury to patients and caregivers. Based on your ability, the patient has the option to leave the foot of the bed or the side TotalCare.
IntelliDrive® Transportation System Power - Reduces the number and effort of staff needed to transfer bariatric patients, improving the efficiency and promoting the dignity of the patient.
FlexAfoot ™ Retractable Foot Mechanism - Caregivers can customize the length of bariatric bed TotalCare. The stirrup retracted provides support for the patient's feet, reducing the need to support additional devices for the feet.
Siderail Extenders - Improves patient safety and provides proper lower extremity alignment when supine.
Height adjustable - Improves the transfer of patients, allowing multiple positions.
New Surgical Technologies
The ideal of all surgery is to get the required work done with minimal trauma to the patient's body and to that end, new ways to reduce unnecessary risks are constantly being developed and improved. During some operations, especially very complicated, a surgeon can now sit in a console a few feet away from the operating table and guide robotic arms holding tiny cameras and instruments while studying 3-D images of the extended process as they are designed on a screen. "Light scalpels," Laser beams can be used to burn, cut or destroy the diseased tissue sealing blood vessels or remove tumors. The laparascope is a fiber optic instrument similar to a telescope, but only about as big around as a fountain pen; increasingly, laparoscopic surgery, also known as minimally invasive surgery (MIS), is replacing the techniques that once required large incisions.