Mobility Aids

Getting around safely at home or in a care setting starts with the right equipment. We carry wheelchairs, rollators, walkers, mobility scooters, patient lifts, and bath chairs to help with everyday movement and transfers. Whether you're recovering from surgery, managing long-term mobility changes, or setting up a safer space for someone you care for, we can help you find what fits. Need guidance choosing? Email us at info@keraemedical.com.

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Pick by mobility level

Electric Lifts

Powered floor lifts for residents who can't bear weight, in standard and bariatric capacities. Slings are matched to the lift model and sold separately.

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Rollators & Walkers

Four-wheel rollators with seats for getting outside, two-wheel walkers for indoor distances, and bariatric frames for heavier users. Brake type matters as much as the frame, so it's worth matching to the user's grip.

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Walking Sticks & Canes

Quad canes for the most stability, offset canes for post-op hip and knee, and folding canes that pack into a bag. Replacement tips and grips kept on hand.

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Wheelchairs

Transport chairs for short trips, lightweight folding chairs for daily indoor use, and standard manual chairs for long-term seating. Seat widths run from standard up to bariatric.

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Power Wheelchairs

Foldable and high-back electric chairs for indoor maneuvering and longer days in the seat. Joystick controls and rechargeable batteries on both.

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Fit matters more than the brand on the frame

Most mobility complaints come down to fit, not the equipment itself. A wheelchair a couple inches too wide makes the user lean for support, and weeks of leaning turns into a skin problem at the hip or sacrum. A walker set too tall keeps the wrist bent up all day until the user quietly gives up on it.

Sizing takes a few minutes and a tape measure. A good rep asks for height, weight, the main use, and any clinical limits before pulling anything off the shelf. If they're not asking, they're guessing, and the guess shows up a few weeks later when the resident stops using the device.

Matching the device to the mobility level

Mobility usually moves along a line, and the right device is the one that matches where someone is on it. A cane is enough when balance is the only issue and the person still carries their own weight. A walker comes in when they need to lean on something with both hands, and a rollator suits someone steady enough to work hand brakes who wants to cover more ground and sit when they tire.

Past walking distance, a manual wheelchair handles someone who can self-propel or has a person to push, and a power chair takes over when neither is realistic. The mistake is jumping too far ahead, putting a steady walker-user in a wheelchair they don't need and costing them strength they'd otherwise keep. Match the device to today's ability, and move up only as that changes.

Choosing the right mobility aid depends on the person using it and where they'll use it most. A foldable walker works well for someone who needs light support getting around the house, while a rollator with a seat gives more stability and a place to rest during longer walks. For anyone recovering from a lower-body injury, forearm crutches offer better weight distribution than standard underarm crutches and are easier on the shoulders over time.

If you're setting up a room for home recovery or managing mobility across a care facility, patient lifts and transfer chairs make safe repositioning possible without straining staff or family caregivers. A gait belt is one of the simplest tools for assisted walking and transfers, and knowing how to use a gait belt correctly can prevent falls during standing and sitting. We also carry bariatric wheelchairs and high-back reclining models for residents or patients who need additional support.

For facilities ordering in bulk, we stock walkers, rollators, wheelchairs, and transfer equipment in case quantities. Our clinical advisors can help nursing home and hospice teams match products to resident needs, whether that means lightweight aluminum rollators for active residents or hydraulic lifts for patients with limited mobility. If you need a wheelchair scale for intake assessments or weight monitoring, we carry those too.

Looking for hospice care supplies or nursing home supplies for your facility? Sign up for a business account here or email us at info@keraemedical.com. Our team is here to help you find the right fit.