consumer report best king size mattress

consumer report best king size mattress

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Consumer Report Best King Size Mattress

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BY MARY BEST & BARBARA T. NELLES The 14-page feature opens with the results of a survey of 62,000 Consumer Reports subscribers, nearly 20,000 of whom had purchased a new bed in the previous three years. The findings are peppered throughout a story, which provides seven steps for shoppers to buy “a mattress you’ll love, and that loves you back.” There is sound advice here, much of which is promoted by the Better Sleep Council, the consumer-education arm of the International Sleep Products Association: The survey also confirms the BSC’s rest-test advice. Seventy-seven percent of Consumer Reports respondents who tested their beds for at least 15 minutes in the store were very happy with their purchase. The mattress industry can get behind messages like those. But then there are the cringe-worthy comments in “Step 4: Never Pay Full Price” about the retail store experience, recommending shoppers always “negotiate with gusto”—even online. And it harps on the discomfort of trying beds in a “fluorescent lit” mattress showroom.




Wear a sleep mask and listen to music on your smartphone.) Also disturbing are “Step 5: “Make Good Use of the Trial Period” and “Step 6: Have Many Happy Returns.” Promises of easy returns have a big downside. Not only are mattress returns a losing proposition for manufacturers and retailers, but too many of those beds go to landfills. The article concludes with ratings of 74 mattress brands, broken down by adjustable air, memory foam and innerspring. Among the memory foam products assessed, less expensive e-commerce and big-box players came out on top—Casper, Novaform and Tuft & Needle. In innersprings, a Charles P. Rogers bed got No. 1, followed by two Sealy Posturepedics and a Denver Mattress Co. model. That most important ranking factor was comfort, and that was determined by evaluating the spinal alignment of different body types and different sleep positions on each model—a rather narrow comfort assessment, in our opinion. Plus, how meaningful can any mattress rankings of major mattress manufacturers be when each has a collection of umbrella brands that represent dozens of constructions and an enormous price range?




The point here is not that we expect—or even suggest—Consumer Reports write a 100% glowing story about mattress buying. We all know we can improve the process and the product. But we wish there were less of this—“because manufacturers’ descriptions of firmness are so fanciful and sometimes fact-free, we suggest ignoring them altogether”—and more of this—“mattress makers are experimenting with new methods of construction, rearranging the layers of foam as well as the placement of coils in innerspring models in a bid to improve comfort.”Bed rails are used by many people to help create a supportive and assistive sleeping environment in homes, assisted living facilities and residential care facilities. This type of equipment has many commonly used names, including side rails, bed side rails, half rails, safety rails, bed handles, assist bars, or grab bars, hospital bed rails, and adult portable bed rails.Many portable bed rail products can be purchased by consumers on websites and in stores without a prescription and without the recommendation of a health care provider.




Other types of bed rails are considered medical devices and subject to FDA oversight.Many death and injury reports related to entrapment and falls for both adult portable bed rail products and hospital bed rails have been reported to the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). All bed rails should be used with caution, especially with older adults and people with altered mental status, physical limitations and certain medical conditions.This web page contains information about the risks and safe use of these products, alternatives to bed rails and how to report a problem with a bed rail product to CPSC or a bed rail medical device to FDA. Example of an adult portable bed rail. Example of a bed handle or grab bar.There is no standard definition for bed rails, but they typically are divided into three distinct types: Portable bed rails for adults, portable bedrails used for children, and hospital bed rails that are attached to a hospital or medical bed.




The term “adult bed rail(s)” on this web page refers to all types and styles of adult portable bed rails; it does not include rails manufactured for specific medical and hospital beds or bed rails used for children ages 2-5.Adult Portable Bed Rails: A portable bed rail is any bed rail product or device that is attachable and removable from a bed, not designed as part of the bed by the manufacturer, and is installed on or used along the side of a bed. These rails are used on beds intended for consumers and are intended to 1) reduce the risk of falling from the bed, 2) assist the consumer in repositioning in the bed, or 3) assist the consumer in transitioning into or out of the bed.Portable bed rails for adults are used in many different settings, including the home, long-term care facilities, assisted living facilities and nursing homes. They are available in a variety of styles, shapes and sizes; some bed rails run along the full length of the bed, while others run a half, quarter or even shorter lengths of the bed.




Portable Bed Rails for Children: Portable bed rails are intended for children (typically from 2 to 5 years of age) who can get in and out of an adult bed unassisted. For more information about these products, please visit the CPSC website.Hospital Bed Rails: These bed rails are intended to be either part of or an accessory to a hospital bed or other FDA-regulated bed. They are considered medical devices. For more information on hospital bed safety, please visit the FDA Hospital Bed website. FDA Consumer Update: Check Adult Portable Bed Rails Often for Safer Use Centers for Disease Control and Prevention: Falls Among Older Adults Centers for Disease Control and Prevention: STEADI (Stopping Elderly Accidents, Deaths & Injuries) Tool Kit for Health Care Providers Consumer Product Safety Commission Report: Adult Portable Bed Rail-Related Deaths, Injuries, and Potential Injuries Consumer Product Safety Commission Neighborhood Safety Network Older Adults Toolkit Department of Veterans Affairs: Preventing Falls

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