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Bed Making

Bed Making. Types of Beds * Bed Hospital bed that can be manually raised and lowered by turning cranks located at the bottom of the bed. * Bed Similar to the gatch bed, but is operated electrically and can be managed by most patients/residents. *

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Bed Making

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  1. Bed Making

  2. Types of Beds • *Bed • Hospital bed that can be manually raised and lowered by turning cranks located at the bottom of the bed. • *Bed • Similar to the gatch bed, but is operated electrically and can be managed by most patients/residents. • * • This is a bed available for the treatment of patients with multiple or advanced pressure ulcers, grafts, burns, and intractable pain. • Bed supports the body evenly • Filled with a *material • Warm, dry air circulates through the material to maintain even temperature and supports the body evenly

  3. If you encounter a bed that is unfamiliar, always ask for assistance!

  4. Purpose of making a neat, clean bed • Helps make residents *. • By keeping beds clean, dry, and wrinkle-free, making a neat, clean bed prevents skin breakdown and decubitus *.

  5. Frequency of changing bed linens • Linens are changed *. • Usually a full change of linens occurs on bath/shower days for residents/patients.

  6. Types of beds *– one with the linens pulled to the top of the bed. • The resident will not use the bed during the day • The bed is ready for a * *– one where the linens are folded back so the resident can climb into the bed during the day as needed. • Top linens are * • The resident uses this bed throughout the day.

  7. Types of beds • *– a bed made with the resident in the bed. Toe pleats can be placed on occupied beds to reduce the pressure on the patient’s toes. • *– a bed made without the resident in the bed.

  8. Types of beds • *– made so the resident/patient can be moved from a stretcher to the bed without having to struggle with linens. • The bed is left at stretcher height • The sheets are folded *the side where the patient will enter. • Sometimes the pillow is placed on the nightstand by the bed until the patient is safely in the bed. • This procedure differs from one facility to another.

  9. Rules for handling linens • Follow the rules of medical asepsis • * when handling soiled linen • Wash hands before handling clean linen • Because the uniform is considered to be dirty, the clean linens should *, but held away from the body. • Never * since this causes the spread of microorganisms. • Clean linens are placed on clean surfaces. • Dirty linens are never placed on the floor. Place soiled linen in the proper receptacle.

  10. Rules for handling linens • Clean linens are collected in the order that they will be used • mattress pad • * • drawsheet • bed protector • top sheet • * • bedspread • pillowcase(s)

  11. Rules for handling linens • Place linens on the bed with the hem edges *. • Any linen brought into a resident/patient’s room must stay there because it is considered to be contaminated. • Other linens can be collected when collecting the bed linens, i.e. towels, washcloths, gowns, bath blanket. • When removing dirty linens *. The side of the linen that touched the resident is rolled inside.

  12. Rules for handling linens • Linen should always be stored in an *. It should never be left uncovered on a cart in the hallway. • Never apply the pillowcase by securing the pillow under the chin and sliding the pillow into the case.

  13. General rules for making the bed • Use good body mechanics • Follow rules of * – standard precautions • Linens must be tight and wrinkle free • Make as much of one side of the bed as possible before going to the other side. This saves time and energy. • A common element in all bed making is leaving the unit *.

  14. Videos Making an Unoccupied Bed Making an Occupied Bed

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