because of seeing your videos, i realized how important it was to have the emergency cords easily accessible. so everytime i go into a public bathroom, i make sure the cord isnt tangled up or stuck somewhere.
The one in my work bathroom is long enough, but customers are always tucking it in behind the handholds to get it out their way, so I constantly untuck it so it hangs properly. Also people pull it like once a day thinking it's the toilet flush, then get annoyed when we come running to check if they are ok or not...
Are these just...things? In bathrooms??? I've only ever seen them in hospitals, and even then in difficult-to-reach places even when I was mostly abled. Is this a country thing or were these input over the pandemic? (Sorry for the questions 😅 just confused and running on no sleep)
If you live in the US we tend to only have these in those single room bathrooms that are labeled as family/disabled and even those bathrooms are rare haha. The most typical place you will find them is places where higher rates of accidents may happen, so hospitals, nursing homes/assisted living facilities, some hotel restrooms (in some hotels you need to ask for an accessible room and half the time those aren't actually fully accessible 😅) airplane and train restrooms. It would be amazing if the US had them everywhere but unfortunately we tend to be pretty lacking in our accessibility measures.
as someone who has a brother who is confined to a whellchair (he has muscular dystrophy which slowly destroys the muscles in his body, preventing him from walking or even moving at all overtime), i can't thank you enough for looking out for other people who are wheelchair-bound!
She can, but she has leg complications. You know, I can stand, but I sure do need wheelchairs at places like Disney world and cosi. It isn’t always paralyzation or visable.
because of seeing your videos, i realized how important it was to have the emergency cords easily accessible. so everytime i go into a public bathroom, i make sure the cord isnt tangled up or stuck somewhere.
The one in my work bathroom is long enough, but customers are always tucking it in behind the handholds to get it out their way, so I constantly untuck it so it hangs properly.
Also people pull it like once a day thinking it's the toilet flush, then get annoyed when we come running to check if they are ok or not...
YOUR HAIR OML I LOVE IT
I LOVE YOUR HAIR
Are these just...things? In bathrooms??? I've only ever seen them in hospitals, and even then in difficult-to-reach places even when I was mostly abled. Is this a country thing or were these input over the pandemic? (Sorry for the questions 😅 just confused and running on no sleep)
They're in accessible bathrooms in case someone needs help, they're not just a covid thing
These are for sudden falls or incapacitation
@@Silverr_wispp I've never seen them in accessible bathrooms before, maybe they're just not over where I am? Idkk
If you live in the US we tend to only have these in those single room bathrooms that are labeled as family/disabled and even those bathrooms are rare haha. The most typical place you will find them is places where higher rates of accidents may happen, so hospitals, nursing homes/assisted living facilities, some hotel restrooms (in some hotels you need to ask for an accessible room and half the time those aren't actually fully accessible 😅) airplane and train restrooms.
It would be amazing if the US had them everywhere but unfortunately we tend to be pretty lacking in our accessibility measures.
@@n.s.m.5847 Ah, that makes a bit more sense. I've still never seen them in family/disabled spots but yeah I'm in the US.
as someone who has a brother who is confined to a whellchair (he has muscular dystrophy which slowly destroys the muscles in his body, preventing him from walking or even moving at all overtime), i can't thank you enough for looking out for other people who are wheelchair-bound!
They don't have these in America except in hospitals
Ohhh! I was so confused like why haven’t I seen this 😭
👌👌👌❤❤❤
Just curious, why does it need to dangle all the way to the bottom?
I assume that if someone has fallen over and can’t get up that they can easily pull the cord from the floor
@@panicedtether3375 Ohh, that makes sense, thank you
If someone who is disabled and would not be able to get up themselves if they fall, they need a way to alert people that they need help
@@harrib2896 Thanks, for some reason I didn't even think of that
Well good thing you don't need it because you can stand
She’s still disabled and even if she wasn’t it’s not specifically for disabled people
She can, but she has leg complications. You know, I can stand, but I sure do need wheelchairs at places like Disney world and cosi. It isn’t always paralyzation or visable.