My wife is a phlebotomist. She requested a way to strap the blood tubes on her arm and this is what I came up with. She used it for the first time last night and was in love with it.
Honestly, if you are doing well for yourself, post these files and spread the word on medical forums. If you're not, stop posting this on Lemmy, go to a patent attorney (assuming others don't exist), and sell these. This is a wonderful idea, and while I'm almost always for giving away when you can, this is one of those moments where a simple thing is 100% genius. Good on you.
Thank you. Never would have thought about patenting something like this. Will have to see if a patent already exist. Will have to look into that eventually. Still in Testing phase currently.
Yeah, the potential for a medical place to hank this idea because it saves their techs 6 minutes a day each, ends up being millions a year, per company. OP is legit sitting on a billion dollar idea.
You and another person said the same thing. Really surprised something like this isn't common place already. A quick search shows cloth versions of this with elastic which seems dubious at best.
I made a version with thicker clamps and it became too hard to insert and remove the tubes. I printed this with petg which has more flex than something like pla. In testing phase now though. So we will see how it holds up.
I think it’s great, and PETg is a fine choice. I’d be curious what TPU would be like (easier to deflect and a little grippy…but maybe too grippy).
Another possibility would be to make a mold and run it with a stiff silicone. There’s a trick of filling the mold with very warm beeswax and then dumping the excess wax out that fills all the pores before you pour in the silicone. I’m just thinking out loud of a way to easily make this heat sterilizable or autoclavable as well as easily reproducible.
Best of luck - it’s great to see practical prints!!
Haha. Never would have thought of a vets office for this. Funny you talk about wrangling the animals. My wife works in a hospital and has to deal with combative patients on occasion. She said it's great for thos le circumstances.
Yeah. So my wife works in a hospital and depending on the patient she alot of the time has very limited options on where she can lay her tubes down when drawing blood so instead of looking for a place to put them she can just have them strapped to her arm. She said it comes in handy when you have a combative patient.