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March 7, 2025

Handle with Care: The Right Way to Lift, Transfer, and Protect Patients (and Yourself!)

Handle with care, because lifting patients isn’t just about strength, it’s about strategy.

Moving patients might seem routine, but one wrong move can land you in a world of pain. Healthcare workers are at high risk for musculoskeletal injuries, and bad lifting techniques don’t just hurt you, they can hurt your patients too.

Every patient transfer comes with risks, but smart techniques can keep you safe.

Why patient handling is a high-stakes task

Muscle strains, back injuries, and sprains are all too common in healthcare. With an aging population and more bariatric patients, the physical demands on caregivers continue to rise.

High-risk scenarios to watch for

Some patient transfers push your body past its limits. Beware of situations that involve:

Pro Tip: If you have to strain, it’s time to use equipment or call for help.

Forget brute force, technique is everything when moving patients.

The golden rules of manual transfers

When mechanical lifts aren’t an option, these principles can help prevent injuries:

Busting myths about patient lifting

Myth: “Good body mechanics will protect me.”

Reality: Body mechanics help, but they’re not enough. Mechanical lifting devices are the real injury-prevention game-changer.

Myth: “Lift equipment takes too long.”

Reality: A trained team can set up and use a lift in under five minutes. That’s less time than it takes to fill out an injury report.

Myth: “We can’t afford lift equipment.”

Reality: The cost of one serious back injury far outweighs the price of safe patient-handling equipment.

A successful Safe Patient Handling (SPH) program doesn’t happen by accident.

Step 1: Identify the risks

Look at injury reports, patient weights, and job tasks to pinpoint high-risk areas. Consider:

Step 2: Get the right tools

The right equipment makes a world of difference. Must-haves include:

Step 3: Train and implement

Even the best equipment is useless without proper training. Make sure your team knows:

Pro Tip: Track injury rates and equipment used to measure success and tweak your SPH program as needed.

Smart transfers start with understanding movement algorithms.

What are patient movement algorithms?

These step-by-step guides help caregivers decide the safest way to transfer a patient. Key considerations include:

How to handle common transfers

Pro Tip: If a patient weighs more than 35 pounds and can’t assist, always use a lift.

Expand your knowledge with our Patient Care Training: Techniques for Safe Patient Transfers course.

This course covers the basics of safe patient handling, but there’s more to learn. For an in-depth understanding of SPH programs and transfer techniques, enroll in our Patient Care Training: Techniques for Safe Patient Transfers.


References

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