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How to Prepare for an Adaptive Equipment Trial

A practical checklist for families and care teams preparing to trial supportive equipment before making a purchase or funding decision.

Child using a walker with orthotic support

Credito de foto: EnabledHub archive

Este articulo esta disponible por ahora en ingles. Estamos preparando la traduccion al Espanol.

14 abr 20263 min

Puntos clave

Write down the exact routine you want to improve.

Decide what success would look like before the trial starts.

Include the user, caregiver, and clinical perspective if all three matter.

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Checklist rapido para cuidadores

Usa esta lista como referencia rapida antes de cada rutina de cuidado.

  • Write down the exact routine you want to improve.
  • Decide what success would look like before the trial starts.
  • Include the user, caregiver, and clinical perspective if all three matter.
  • Measure doorway widths and turning spaces.
  • Note bed, chair, and toilet heights.
  • Photograph the route if several people are involved in decision making.

Start With The Real Routine

The goal of an equipment trial is not to see whether a product works in theory. It is to find out whether the product improves a real routine in a real environment. Before the trial, define which moments are hardest right now: bed-to-chair transfer, shower access, toileting, walking to the kitchen, or positioning during school or therapy.

When the routine is clear, the trial becomes much more useful. You are no longer reacting to a product demo. You are testing whether a product helps a specific problem with a measurable outcome.

  • Write down the exact routine you want to improve.
  • Decide what success would look like before the trial starts.
  • Include the user, caregiver, and clinical perspective if all three matter.

Measure The Environment Beforehand

Many failed equipment trials are really environment failures. A product may be appropriate, but the doorway is too narrow, the turn into the bathroom is too tight, the bed height is wrong, or the transfer space does not match the equipment footprint.

Take a small set of measurements before the trial so you can rule out obvious mismatches early.

  • Measure doorway widths and turning spaces.
  • Note bed, chair, and toilet heights.
  • Photograph the route if several people are involved in decision making.

Decide What To Observe

Trials are most helpful when people know what they are looking for. That usually includes fit, user comfort, caregiver effort, setup time, transfer safety, and whether the product still works when the user is tired or distracted.

It also helps to agree in advance on which problems are acceptable and which are deal-breakers.

  • Check setup time from start to ready-to-use.
  • Observe whether the user can repeat the routine more than once.
  • Record where the caregiver still has to compensate physically.

Leave With A Decision Checklist

A successful trial should end with clear next steps, not vague impressions. Summarize what worked, what did not, what still needs to be measured, and what should be compared before purchase or funding submission.

This makes it easier to compare options, talk to resellers, and prepare documentation for occupational therapists, schools, insurers, or funding programs.

  • Capture the strongest benefits in plain language.
  • Note any fit or safety concerns that still need follow-up.
  • List the remaining questions before choosing a final product.

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