🛡️ Elevate safety and independence—because your peace of mind deserves the best!
The Able Life Bedside Safety Handle is an ASTM-certified, height-adjustable bed rail designed to prevent falls and aid mobility for seniors and adults with limited mobility. Supporting up to 300 pounds, it fits most bed sizes and mattress thicknesses, features ergonomic padding, and includes a convenient 4-pocket organizer. Easy to install without tools, it combines safety, comfort, and practicality in a sleek, low-profile design.
D**N
Ideal, secure bed rail for partial paralysis due to stroke
Installed this for a patient that has hemiparesis after a stroke. Could get in and out of bed during the day, but when tired or just waking up in the morning, simply didn't have enough energy to prop himself up on one elbow and push up to a sitting position.Received it - very light and compact vs. the board-mounted rails, the steel frame rails, and other rails I've compared before buying. Aluminum, nylon strap, easy to put together - slide strap over a rail, then simply click the rail together in three locations, the push pins lock it into place, and you're done assembling. To install, simply lift the bed at the edge you want it installed on, slide the bottom of this rail under the mattress. Take the strap by one hand, lift the edge of the bed as you walk around to the other side. Once opposite the rail, simply pull the strap to make sure there's no slack underneath the mattress. Next, and this may require help if you're not strong, you'll need to push up to lift both the mattress and box frame just enough to slip one end fo the strap around the metal bed frame (or, if you've got some more complex wood frame, around all that, which may require lifting the mattress and box frame up, then the wood frame up, too). Click ends of strap together, tighten belt, and you're done.Installed in less than a few minutes on a standard queen size mattress without any trouble at all. (I can lift 50+ lbs, so pushing up both the box frame and mattress enough wasn't an issue - else, get help, or get a jack under that bed to jack it up - might need a piece of wood under the bed to prevent the jack from poking through the box frame. Hm, otherwise, might have to flip the mattress off, then you can lift the easier box frame by hand.)Naturally, all of these bed frames will wobble a little bit, but some are less 'safe' than this one. For example, there's one where a steel bed frame is bolted by only 2 bolts to a wood board, which then slips under the mattress. Huh?! Not even solid wood - more like compressed, and it's one easy way to fall because someday, the patient will put too much on those bolts, and the wood will split and fail.This one has the strap pulling across the bed, so there's no way a normal patient can pull the frame out on the side it's installed on. You'd have to apply so much force that you'd have to break the nylon strap. (Go take any backpack, that thin, 1-2" wide strap - just go try pulling it to break it. Not possible - and you can easily hang your entire weight off one.) The frame slips far enough under the mattress that it can't tilt up and somehow slip out either (besides, the nylon strap will prevent the tilting, too.) You could slide it asymetrically towards the front or end of the bed... if you had enough strength to pull the bed rail in a circle pivoting around the strap tied to the bed frame...along with the mattress on top. But again, not going to realistically happen with any patient in real life.Thus, quite safe when installed - it isn't going to ever fail or move from your installation point. You can hold it and lean over the rail and it won't move, slip out, flip, etc. Pull on it outwards and it's not going anywhere. Put body weight on it and it's not going anywhere. And you can't feel it under the mattress either (you may if you've got a super-cheap, thin mattress). Not that it was ever 'designed' to hold your entire weight - but it's sturdy, built out of aluminum, and that nylon strap isn't likely to fail, so there's not much that can fail.Slip on carry is nice - nylon, stiched fine, no issues here. Not cheap thin, but decent. One side has a full width pocket (for magazines), the other side is divided into three pockets (for remote control, glasses, etc). You'll have to decide which should face you in bed, and can easily reverse the slip on.Foam padding on bar is solid and nice - not cheap, a good, stiff foam that's like to last awhile. Doesn't go all the way down the frame in case you decide not to use the slip on - just the top curve of the rail. But what's exposed is generally smooth and not much there to catch on or poke you.Super-easy for patient to get himself up with one hand now. Not so wide/long that it blocks him from pivoting up and swinging his legs off the bed. Have it installed so half the frame covers the lower half of his pillow, the other half covers the bed. Just about the right mounting location for easy reach.At the current price, a touch pricey vs. the cheaper models available, but now that it's installed and having compared against all the rest for the use for this particular patient, an ideal purchase and very satisfied. Would not get any other since it also has the benefit of being very compact and easy to pack for storage and travel, in addition to the secure mounting method . (Box about 1 1/2" deep and the size of the upper frame when disassembled.)
I**N
Great little helping tool for bed-bound or physically challenged user!
We needed an unobtrusive, easy-to-install way to allow hubby to give himself some pressure relief by repositioning while in bed. We didn't want to have a hospital-bed looking arrangement and for us it wasn't about safety from falling out of bed. Because we use an adjustable bed base to allow for his positioning, we DID have limitations about the size of whatever stabilization mechanism could be so that the bending points in the base wouldn't be impeded.This small, lightweight rail is a perfect compromise!I love that:1. It weighs less than 2 lbs.2. It is small enough not to be really obvious but it's easy to find and use, even with bed linens fluffing up near it.3. The arched handle is well padded and comfortable for hubby to grip4. The part of the rail that slides between bed and adjustable bed base (or maybe, for you it's the box spring) is easily assembled and stays put for us even without the ample strap being installed to the bedframe. We forgo the strap because I am concerned that it might possibly interfere with the mechanics of the bed. It is perfectly stable just with hubby's weight holding it down.5. It comes with a nylon, multi-pocket organizer that simply slips right over the rail once it's installed. It is pretty handy for holding the bed adjustment clicker but I suspect that if the user didn't have the level of limitations that hubby has, it would really be a VERY cool way to get added nearby storage for additional things like glasses, pens/pencils, etc. It has ample pockets on both sides! I think that if it ever gets yucky, it should go right in the washer/dryer!6. Because there are no legs that go to the floor, this can be used properly on any mattress/base (or boxspring) arrangement. No lopsided mattress being held up by non-adjustable legs!7. It went together in less than 2 minutes and I was able to install it on the bed in a ridiculously short amount of time!Please note that there's no way on a mattress smaller than king sized to use two of these together, one on either side of the bed. The part that slips between mattress and boxspring/base is too long to install two at exactly the same point per side. They would bump into each other and prevent the rails from being properly/safely installed. So you'd have to keep one up more towards the head and the other closer to the hip.If you're not trying to prevent someone from falling out of bed or you/your loved one needs a little standby help to be more independent with repositioning, getting to sitting upright at the bed's edge or other non-safety related activities, I would highly recommend you checking this out!
L**S
Very sturdy
This rail is small enough so it doesn’t affect your legs swinging out of bed but serves as a push up to standing point, if your legs are weak. It really served its purpose well and easy to install.
C**P
does the job; may require some mending/modifications after several years
This has worked well. We're still using it 6 years after purchase. Just a few notes:1) Some adjustable beds leave a gap when the person gets out of bed, with the result that there would be nothing to keep this rail in place. ("Mattress genie" does the same thing.) Check for this issue before purchasing the rail (or perhaps before purchasing an adjustable bed). We did successfully transfer this rail to a hospital bed, but only because a heavy/non-gapping mattress keeps it in place.2) After about 5 years the bottom seam of the pocket gave out and had to be sewn back up.3) Recently the person using the rail has tried to put a remote control into the inner pocket and missed, with the result that the remote falls to the floor. The problem is that both pocket and background are black. I sewed a blanket stitch along the top inner pocket, using thickish light-colored thread, and this makes the pocket boundary easier to see and feel.4) We tried a different brand at one point, mostly for aesthetic reasons, but the pocket was on the outside and thus mostly useless to the person using the rail. So that rail, while nicer looking, was returned.
Trustpilot
3 days ago
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