I have an office chair from Office Max, made by Samsonite, with a padded seat and arms that allows for adjustment of the arms, height and forward/back positioning.  The height adjustment is more than likely inadequate to aide in his need for assistance in getting up and down. 
 

Nancy Gizzi, M.S., C.C.C.-Speech Language Pathology
Lee Center For Sports Medicine & Rehabilitation
Campus of Cape Coral Hospital
Lee Memorial Health System
Phone: 239-772-6572
Fax: 239-574-0317
Pager: 239-930-4613

 


From: xxxxxx@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:xxxxxx@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of AMY S. GOLDMAN
Sent: Tuesday, September 22, 2009 8:17 PM
To: xxxxxx@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: question from ALS Chapter

what about a "lift assist" chair, or even just the lift assist seat?
Amy

On Tue, Sep 22, 2009 at 7:46 PM, Alisa Brownlee <xxxxxx@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
First, sorry, but I don't know what that "lockout" message relates to but I did ask the IT person from National.  I'm waiting to hear back from her.
 
Second, I received the following message from the ALS Assoc in TN.  Anyone have any thoughts on this?
 
To: xxxxxx@xxxxxxxxx
Subject: seating question

I am just hoping to see if there might be something I’m overlooking since I’, not a “rehab” person.  I had a family call in asking if I knew of any chairs that would fit at the dining room table that were cushioned (comfortable) both in the seat and on the arms.  They are not looking for a wheelchair, more of a regular chair.  This man is a patriarch and being at the table with the family is important.  He is somewhat fearful of chairs on casters (they’ve tried this) but he also needs help getting up/down.  He does not have a power chair- just a transport chair and lift chair.  I have suggested a hospital bed type table for the lift chair and putting a cushion in the transport chair.  Any suggestions?  Apparently he is just not comfortable in the chairs the family has tried for him.  I didn’t know if a “gerichair” might work without the tray or if the tray could even be removed?
Any thought would be appreciated and I realize there might not be a good answer here other than just shopping for a comfortable dining chair- just thought I’d check!

 

Patty Lane

The ALS Association, Tennessee Chapter

Patient Services Manager

615-279-5551   |   615-279-5445 fax

 

 
Alisa Brownlee, ATP
Clinical Manager, Assistive Technology Services
ALS (Lou Gehrig's Disease) Association National Office and Greater Philadelphia Chapter
Direct Phone: 215-631-1877




--
Amy S. Goldman
Associate Director, Institute on Disabilities at Temple University
University Services Building Suite 610
1601 N. Broad Street
Philadelphia, PA 19122
215-204-3862
www.disabilities.temple.edu