wayne wrote:
Quote:
Zealacare’s proprietary system will only work with Zealacare Premium Briefs. Our disposable briefs are designed with sensor strips in the manufacturing process. The briefs are made with maximum absorption and comfort in mind.
The above is the primary disadvantage as far as I can see. The
sensor strips is an interesting idea in that it is better than a wet/not-wet indication, perhaps showing how much of the diaper is wet.
Wayne, that is EXACLTY how they work. There is a sensor that is recharable on the OUTSIDE of the diaper so its not touching urine or feces, and it connects to an app on your phone. Within 20 minutes maximum after an episode the app indicates how saturated the brief is. Sometimes an episode is registered immediately, sometimes it takes a while. But this is a HUGE advantage over the every 2 hour check and change system. A patient using this system would be sitting in a saturated brief for a maximum of 20 minutes. The saturation levels were SPOT ON. Even though the diaper was not completly wet front to back, the system detected that it was saturated enough to warrant a change. Which is how it works for most premium adult diapers. For men especially, most of the wetting takes place in the crotch, with the back not getting much aaction unless we are laying down.
The briefs themselves are very good quality overall, but the tapes could use some improvement. They are sticky tab style on a landing zone on a cloth backed diaper. I would prefer a hook and loop tab on a cloth backed diaper TBH.
I had planned to use these at work to take the guesswork out of when I needed to change while working to be able to focus on the lot, but unfortunately the sensor bluetooth system only runs on 2.4 Ghz Wif and Meijer Wifi is 5 Ghz. Oh well. Perhaps I will invest in a few bags or a case and use them for change when wet, only changing when they are at a certian saturation level, utilizing the app to know when exactly to change. I think that is a huge advantage... I'm not wasting diapers that way .. underutilizing them, and I can get a rough idea how much I release with an average episode, which can help with plannig diaper setups for work or when I am out an about.
If anyone is curious, I would say try them. The extra cost is only because of the sensor. Once you pay 60 dollars for the sensor, you can buy additional briefs without the sensor, and they dont cost as much. You can get a case of 60 for 108 dollars, which is a reasonable price point, given the quality and absorbency of the diaper. It has leak guards, and 700 ml capacity to boot. On top of that the smart tech makes the extra cost compared to similar absorbency diapers worth it in my opinion.
Here is the website:
http://Zealacare.comedit: I put that the product has waistbands. It in fact does not. My mistake. But it DOES have very tall standing leak guards, which is a must for premium incontinence protection
