Shoe donner apparatus and method.
20180303264 ยท 2018-10-25
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
A shoe donner device includes a platform holding one or both shoes, already tied, made ready for donning without having to reach down to floor level. The readied shoe donner includes a shoehorn removably inserted into each shoe, and tongue clips removably inserted over the tip of each shoe tongue and pulling it slightly upward and forward. The platform is tilted to facilitate the seated user's insertion of foot partway into shoe, and can be rocked back and forth. Pulling on reachable cords exerts strong forward push of shoehorn against foot heels, driving the feet fully into the tied shoes. Pulling shoehorns and tongue clips free with reachable strings or a hooked stick releases the shod feet, ready for the day.
Claims
1. An apparatus for enabling a user to don a shoe even if the user is unable to reach down to the shoe, and generally even if the shoe is already fastened for wearing, the apparatus comprising: a rectangular platform of length and width greater than the shoe, the platform having a crosspiece over a first end against which the back of the shoe heel can be placed, and a toe clamp adjustably attached near the opposite end of the platform, which toe clamp can be fixed against the front of the toe of the shoe to hold the shoe against horizontal movement and restrain the toe of the shoe against vertical movement as well; a pivot member hinge-affixed to the underside of the platform, crosswise, preferably about halfway forward from the first end of the of the platform, so that the platform at rest slopes upward toward the front to facilitate placing foot in shoe, while remaining free to be tilted forward and back to facilitate full insertion; an elongate, springy bar standing upright at the first end of the platform, the base of the bar being set into the crosspiece halfway across the width of the platform, from which point the springy bar extends upward behind and well above the the back of the shoe; a slippery surfaced shoehorn mounted slidingly on the springy bar, vertically adjustable and removable, so that its lower end can be set partway down into the heel of the shoe, the shoehorn extending upward behind and above the back of the shoe; a crossbar attached to the upright springy bar, behind the shoehorn but not connected to it, the crossbar reaching horizontally across the width of the platform below it; a sidewall attached along each long side of the platform, the length of the sidewall reaching forward to the shoe tongue position and its height being appreciably higher than the shoe tongue; a pulley affixed to each sidewall at crossbar height and preferably about a quarter of the length of the platform forward from the first end of the platform, each pulley being aligned to accomodate a donner cord as follows; a donner cord attached to each end of the crossbar, from which point each donner cord extends horizontally forward to pass around the underside of each pulley and thence upward to where each donner cord can be readily grasped by the user; notches atop each sidewall holding a cord crossing from one sidewall to the other, above the exposed tip of the shoe tongue, to which cord is attached a tongue clip shapeable to clasp the exposed tip of the shoe tongue, the cord being adjustable in tension to pull upward on the the tongue clip and thus pull the shoe tongue upward even though the shoe is already tied, and the tongue clip having a slippery underside; a release string or long stick wherewith the user can pull the tongue clip off the shoe tongue; a release string or long stick wherewith the user can pull the shoehorn out of the shoe heel.
2. The apparatus according to claim 1, wherein a second pulley is provided on each end of the crossbar, horizontally across from the pulley or knob mounted on each sidewall, with the donner cord passing around the second pulley or knob and back to the sidewall in order to double the forward push on the user's heel as the donner cord is pulled upward, without increasing the user's lift on the shoe donner.
3. An apparatus for enabling a user to make ready and don both shoes in one operation, even if the user is unable to reach down to the shoes, and generally even if they are already fastened for wearing, the apparatus comprising: a rectangular platform of length and width greater than two shoes, the platform having a crosspiece over a first end against which the back of both shoe heels can be placed, and a toe clamp adjustably attached near the opposite end of the platform which can be fixed against the front of the toes of both shoes to hold the shoes against horizontal movement and restrain against vertical movement as well; a pivot member hinge-affixed to the underside of the platform, crosswise, preferably about halfway forward from the first end of the of the platform, so that the platform at rest slopes upward toward the front to facilitate placing feet in shoes, while remaining free to be tilted forward and back to facilitate full insertion. a generally rectangular plate, a driver plate, having its bottom edge hinge-attached across the width of the first end of the platform, from which hinge-attached edge the plate extends upward behind and above the the back of the shoe; two slippery surfaced shoehorn mounted slidingly and removably on the front face of said driver plate so that the lower ends of the shoehorn can be set partway down into the heels of the shoes, the shoehorns then extending upward behind and above the backs of the shoes; a center wall attached along the platform between the two shoes, the length of the center wall reaching forward past the shoe tongue position and its height being above shoe height; a first pulley, affixed to the center wall and preferably about a quarter of the length of the platform forward from the first end of the platform, and at the height of the driver plate; a second pulley, mounted behind the middle of the upper edge of the driver plate, and having apertures through the driver plate directly forward of the top and bottom of the groove in the second pulley; a strong cord, the donner cord, attached to the center wall and extending back through the bottom aperture in the driver plate to the pass around the second pulley and forward through the top aperture, then extending horizontally forward to pass around the underside of the first pulley and thence upward to where each donner cord can be readily grasped by the user; tongue clips having a slippery underside and shapeable to clasp the exposed tip of each shoe tongue; two tongue cords adjustably hung from near the top of the forward end of the center wall, one tongue cord reaching down to hold the tongue clip on one shoe and the other to the other, each tongue cord angled sufficiently to pull the tongue clips forward and upward; release strings or a long stick wherewith the user can pull the tongue clip off each shoe tongue; release strings or a long stick wherewith the user can pull the shoehorns out of the shoe heels.
4. A method for donning shoes, comprising: providing a shoe donning apparatus having a platform ready to hold the shoes between a fixed crosspiece behind the shoes' heels and an adjustable toe clamp against the shoes' toes; shoehorns slidingly affixed on a driver plate so that the shoehorns are ready to be removably inserted into the shoes' heels; a donner cord set ready to pull the driver plate and its shoehorns forward; tongue clips ready to be removably inserted on the tip of the shoe tongue and hung on tongue cords adjustably fixable to a center wall affixed to the platform between the shoes; lifting the apparatus onto a bed or other usably elevated plane by means of the reachably-hung donner cord, and there setting the shoes in the apparatus and securing them adequately by setting the back of the heels of the shoes against the crosspiece and adjusting and fastening the toe clamp against the fronts of the toes of the shoes; further preparing the shoes for donning by adjusting the shoehorns of the shoe donner down into the heel part of the shoes, securing the tongue clips onto the leading edge of the shoe tongues and adjusting the tongue cords so that the tongue clip pulls forward and upward on the shoe tongue; lowering the shoe-readied apparatus to a floor, preferably with the front of the apparatus against a wall which preferably has a mirror near the floor so that the user, seated in a wheelchair for example, can see lower legs and feet and the readied shoe donner; placing feet toe-first into the shoe with foot heels against the upper part of the shoehorns; pulling the shoehorns forward by means of the donner cords, driving the feet into the prepared shoes, rocking the shoe donner platform forward or back and forth to help the action; removing the shoehorn and tongue clip by pulling up a release string attached to each or by using a hook-ended stick, the shod feet thus being freed to be raised at the heels and removed from the shoe donner, ready for the day; hanging up the donner cord and release strings to be reachable for the next shoe donning.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0007]
[0008]
[0009]
[0010]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0011]
[0012]
[0013] The preferred floor plate 10 can rest on the floor F with its front end against a wall (not shown) to keep the shoe donner 1 from sliding during foot insertion. A full length mirror on the wall enables a user in a chair or wheelchair to see the foot and shoe donner 1, very helpfully.
[0014] Referring further to
[0015] In trials, the shoe donning operation succeeds with common shoes tied in advance, albeit not too snugly tied. Donning some shoes (notably the slip on loafer types, but more) may not even need the use of the tongue clip 8. However, some shoes cannot be donned if tied, including some hook and loop Velcro strapped shoes favoured especially by older and handicapped people. In such a case the shoe can be set ready with strap open, allowing the tongue clip 8 to pull the tongue area well up to enable donning. Then, the user can ideally close the strap well enough (trials are showing) by use of a pincer-equipped long stickpreferably a modified version of the simple hook-ended stick noted earlier.
[0016] Some users might be unable to press the foot down strongly enough to keep the shoe donner 1 from rocking forward too much, or even lifting off the floor, as the donner cords 5a are pulled upward. Accordingly, the donner cords 5a may be made long enough, and joined as one, that a seated user could first lean forward and loop the donner cord over their head and thence around the back of their neck or upper back. Then the user simply sits up straight to pull up on the looped donner cord 5aable to pull more strongly in that mannerwhile holding the leg down near the knee with hand or forearm.
[0017] Referring again to
[0018] (Having a peg in the wall, just above the flooror simply using the bottom frame of the aforementioned mirrorenables placing the front of the floor plate 10 under same so that removing the shod foot does not lift the shoe donner 1 off the flooralthough limited trials showed no such problem).
[0019] Preparation: A preferred method of readying the shoe for donning in advance is now described, wherewith the user does not have to reach down to floor level. The shoe donner 1 is lifted onto a bed or other usably elevated plane by means of the donner cords 5a (reachably hung following prior usage). On the bed, the shoe S is set in the shoe donner 1 and fitted in all details as was discussed and shown in
[0020] In trials, the shoe donning operation succeeds with common shoes tied in advance, albeit not too snugly tied. Donning some shoes (notably the slip on loafer types, but more) do not even need the use of the tongue clip 8. However, some shoes cannot be donned if tied, and this includes some hook and loop Velcro strapped shoes favoured especially by older and handicapped people. In such a case the shoe can be set ready with strap open, allowing the tongue clip 8 to pull the tongue area well up. With foot shod and removed from the shoe donner 1, the strap can be closed adequately by use of the same hooked-ended stick as noted above (not shown). In a further improvement (also not shown), the driver plate 11 can initially be slanted further back to lower its height to ease foot insertion, wherewith the shoehorn 6 would be made in a telescoping fashion to reach forward over the top of the shoe heel.
[0021] Trials also show a problem with some very flexible shoes with soft soles: Holding the shoe at the toe may be insufficient to avoid crumpling of the shoe as the tongue clip 8 is pulled forward. Accordingly. (not shown) improvements are being considered at the shoe heel to lock the shoe in place there, and/or to heighten the curb 2a to just above the back of the shoe and top the curb with a small slippery plate extending barely ahead of the back of the shoe and bendable slightly down to hold the top of the back of the shoe, removably. The shoehorn piece 6 is shortened so as to push forward over this slippery plate, not protruding down into the shoe heel but simply driving the foot heel forward sufficiently to allow it to slip over this slippery plate and down into the shoe.
[0022] Various changes and modifications may be made to the embodiments described without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention defined in the appended claims. The pulleys could simply be slippery knobs or grooves, for example, improving cost and durability. The pull mechanism could be changed to a push mechanism, and either could be motorized to make the shoe donner even more broadly helpful.