Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The 'belts tying them in' are for their own safety. It prevents them from slipping out of their chairs or flopping over.
I understand that, and I think it is fine personally, but I was just under the impression that it still wasn't allowed.
I'm surprised they used belts, too. At the rehabs and memory care places I have experience with they don't allow anything that a patient can't remove themselves. That means no mittens, seatbelts on wheel chairs, bedrails, chemical restraints like Haldol, etc. Even if you request bedrails to keep someone from rolling out of bed, they won't allow them because they "restrain."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The 'belts tying them in' are for their own safety. It prevents them from slipping out of their chairs or flopping over.
I understand that, and I think it is fine personally, but I was just under the impression that it still wasn't allowed.
I'm surprised they used belts, too. At the rehabs and memory care places I have experience with they don't allow anything that a patient can't remove themselves. That means no mittens, seatbelts on wheel chairs, bedrails, chemical restraints like Haldol, etc. Even if you request bedrails to keep someone from rolling out of bed, they won't allow them because they "restrain."