A draw sheet is a small bed sheet placed crosswise over the middle of the bottom sheet of a mattress to cover the area between the person's upper back and thighs, often used by medical professionals to move patients. It can be made of plastic, rubber, or cotton, and is about half the size of a regular sheet. It can be used in place of a mattress pad if a rubber mattress is used. The draw sheet may or may not be tucked into the sides of the bed. When a draw sheet is used to move patients, it is sometimes known as a lift sheet. Nursing manuals recommend that, when a plastic or rubber draw sheet is used, a cotton drawsheet is placed over it. If a folded sheet is used as a draw sheet, the folded edge of the sheet is positioned at the person's upper body. Draw sheets used as lift sheets are generally not tucked in, though sometimes after the move, they are.
Further information: Patient lift and Activities of daily living assistanceReferences
- "draw-sheet" Archived 2010-02-15 at the Wayback Machine. mondofacto.com. Retrieved 10 October 2010.
- Hegner, Barbara R.; Needham, Joan Fritsch. (2002). Assisting in Long Term Care (4th ed.). Delmar. p. 245. ISBN 0-7668-3479-4
- Carter, Pamela J. (2008). Lippincott's Textbook for Nursing Assistants: A Humanistic Approach to Caregiving (2nd ed.). Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. p. 276. ISBN 978-0-7817-6685-2
- Beebe, Richard W. O.; Funk Deborah L. (2001). Fundamentals of Emergency Care (vol 1). Delmar. pp. 281–285. ISBN 0-7668-1498-X
- Zucker, Elena D. (2009). The Caregiver's Resourcebook (6th ed.). Rex Bookstore. p. 156.