Transfer From Bed to Chair With Sit-to-Stand
Key Points
- Sit-to-stand transfers require correct care-plan indication and resident ability to assist with standing mechanics.
- Symmetric sling and strap setup with clear path control prevents imbalance and collision injury.
- Lift brakes are not applied during lowering due to compression/tip risk with weight shift.
Equipment
- Sit-to-stand lift
- Transfer sling/strap set per manufacturer
- Wheelchair
- Nonskid footwear
- Hand hygiene supplies
Procedure Steps
- Perform routine pre-procedure actions: knock, identify resident, explain procedure, provide privacy, and perform hand hygiene.
- Position wheelchair with foot pedals removed, lock wheelchair brakes, and clear rotation path.
- Place transfer sling under armpits with handles facing away; secure seat belt/cross straps per manufacturer.
- Raise bed so lift legs can pass underneath; open lift legs if bed clearance allows.
- Place resident feet fully on lift base; protect head/arms from lift-frame contact.
- Secure calf strap if available and verify proper foot placement.
- Connect sling to lift with equal-length attachment points on both sides.
- Confirm arms are outside lift arms and resident has no dizziness before stand.
- Instruct resident to pull with arms and straighten legs while lift raises to stand.
- Move lift away from bed, open lift legs if needed, then rotate toward wheelchair.
- When knees contact seat, lower resident into wheelchair without applying lift brakes.
- Guide resident fully back into chair, disconnect sling/straps, move lift away safely, remove sling, and release wheelchair brakes when transfer is complete.
- Finish post-procedure comfort/safety checks, hand hygiene, and documentation of skin/pain/other changes.
Common Errors
- Using sit-to-stand when resident cannot participate in standing mechanics → high failure and injury risk.
- Unequal sling connection lengths → lateral tilt and fall risk.
- Lift-frame contact with resident head/arms during approach/exit → impact injury risk.
- Applying lift brakes while lowering → leg compression or instability risk.
Related
- assisting-clients-to-transfer - Transfer status criteria determine sit-to-stand appropriateness.
- transfer-from-bed-to-chair-with-gait-belt - Both procedures require dizziness checks and controlled stand-to-sit cueing.