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Swivel seat pads for car

(15 Posts)
rubysong Fri 13-Jun-25 17:44:14

DH, with Parkinson's, had difficulty getting in and out of the car. Can anyone recommend a good swivel thingy to help. I've read reviews of some and they are very mixed. Many thanks.

rubysong Fri 13-Jun-25 17:44:56

That should be 'has' not 'had'.

NotSpaghetti Sat 14-Jun-25 01:14:10

I would like to know about this too as the slippy ones are supposed to be removed whilst travelling and then presumably put back in somehow when you want to get out.

The best option is a swivel seat I expect.. I don't know if that's an adaptation worth considering?

teabagwoman Sat 14-Jun-25 06:55:13

I’ve no experience of swivel seats but a tried and tested solution to this is to put something like a carrier bag or a piece of polythene on the seat. Makes it much easier to help someone to swivel round.

Aveline Sat 14-Jun-25 06:59:47

I was going to suggest that too. It worked well after my hip and knee ops.

Luckygirl3 Sat 14-Jun-25 07:40:02

I had a swivel circle for the seat and found it useless unfortunately.

Fleur20 Sat 14-Jun-25 08:36:40

The swivel circles only work if the seat is absolutely level.
Two crumpled plastic bags/binliners placed on top of each other provide enough 'slippage' to help slide round. But ideally should be removed for travel...

rubysong Sat 14-Jun-25 09:14:30

Thank you for those suggestions. I will try carrier bags.

silverlining48 Sat 14-Jun-25 09:31:06

I successfully used plastic bags post hip surgery fir getting in and out of the car, but some plastic worked better than other types so try it out first.

Whiff Sat 14-Jun-25 09:40:42

If there is a mobility shop near you like Care co etc your husband could try one out before you buy.

NotSpaghetti Sat 14-Jun-25 10:54:05

I was advised carrier bags for hip surgery too.

Taking them out for travel and putting them in again sound awkward though.

Whethertomorrow Sat 14-Jun-25 11:09:40

I use a black bin bag. I don’t remove it either, but maybe it’s because I’m a rebel.

Astitchintime Sat 14-Jun-25 11:17:16

You could ask your OT dept at the hospital for the loan of a banana board to trial and then buy one if it helps. Personally, transferring with one would be far safer than sitting on something that is not integral to the structure of the car seat.

Fleur20 Sat 14-Jun-25 11:27:21

Banana boards are really only used for side to side transfers.. and again the problem is that car seats are rarely completely level.. and removal of said board would be very awkward.

optimismreaction Thu 19-Jun-25 05:34:19

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