Treatment Tables, Medical Furniture & Infusion Stands

Shop treatment tables, infusion stands, mayo tables, stretcher trolleys, massage beds, and other medical furniture for clinics, hospitals, rehabilitation centers, and veterinary practices. Built for patient positioning, workflow efficiency, hygiene, and day-to-day treatment room use.

Treatment tables, infusion stands, stretcher trolleys, mayo tables, and related medical furniture form the backbone of an efficient treatment space. Whether you are fitting out a physiotherapy clinic, hospital room, rehabilitation center, veterinary practice, or wellness treatment room, the right furniture improves patient positioning, staff workflow, hygiene, and day-to-day safety. This category brings together essential clinic equipment designed for examination, treatment delivery, patient transfer, IV support, and room organization.

Who It's For

This category is suitable for physiotherapy clinics, rehabilitation centers, hospitals, outpatient departments, sports medicine facilities, wellness and massage practices, day surgery environments, and veterinary clinics. It is especially useful for buyers setting up or upgrading treatment rooms that need reliable support surfaces, IV stands, transfer equipment, and movable clinical furniture.

Common users include physiotherapists, sports therapists, doctors, nurses, chiropractors, massage therapists, rehab specialists, veterinary teams, and procurement staff responsible for equipping treatment areas with practical, durable furniture.

How to Choose

Start by matching the equipment to the treatment environment and the type of patient handling required. A standard treatment table or massage bed may suit manual therapy and routine assessment, while a hydraulic or surgical table is better suited to advanced procedures, controlled positioning, or specialist environments. Tilt tables are useful where gradual vertical positioning and neurological or rehabilitation support are needed.

For support equipment, choose infusion stands based on stability, hook count, mobility, and base design. Mayo tables and utility trolleys should be selected based on ease of movement, tray accessibility, and cleaning requirements. Stretchers and transfer trolleys should be chosen according to transfer frequency, patient load, maneuverability, and room layout.

Key features to compare include height adjustability, weight capacity, upholstery or stainless-steel surface type, wheel quality, locking mechanisms, cleaning compatibility, and whether the furniture is intended for human clinical use, wellness use, or veterinary use.

What Conditions does this product range solve

This product range does not directly treat a condition in the way a therapeutic device or consumable might. Instead, it supports the safe and effective delivery of care for a wide range of clinical needs. Treatment tables and massage beds help position patients for assessment, manual therapy, musculoskeletal treatment, and post-injury rehabilitation. Tilt tables support progressive positioning in neurological rehab and mobility re-education. Infusion stands support environments where IV delivery and fluid management are part of care. Stretchers and transfer trolleys help move patients with limited mobility, post-operative needs, or acute care requirements.

In practice, this category supports workflows around sports injuries, orthopedic rehab, neurological rehabilitation, post-operative recovery, manual therapy, routine examination, wound care, infusion-related care, and patient transport within treatment spaces.

Compare product vs product

Treatment table vs massage bed: Treatment tables are generally selected for assessment, physiotherapy, sports medicine, and clinical treatment workflows. Massage beds are more often chosen for manual therapy, spa-style environments, and general comfort-focused sessions.

Tilt table vs standard treatment table: A standard treatment table is best for routine examination and therapy. A tilt table is designed for controlled upright positioning, making it more suitable for rehabilitation scenarios where gradual elevation is needed.

Operating table vs general treatment table: Operating tables are built for specialist procedural or surgical settings, often with stronger structural support and more advanced adjustment options. General treatment tables are better suited to everyday clinic use.

Mayo table vs trolley: A mayo table keeps instruments or supplies within immediate reach during treatment or procedures. A trolley is more useful for transporting equipment, consumables, or tools between rooms and work areas.

Infusion stand with cast iron base vs standard infusion stand: A heavier cast iron base typically offers greater stability in busy medical settings. Standard stands may be more suitable where lighter movement and easier repositioning are priorities.

Transfer stretcher trolley vs fixed furniture: Transfer trolleys are essential when patients need to be moved safely between rooms or care stages. Fixed furniture is better where treatment happens in one place and transport is not part of the workflow.

FAQs

What is the difference between a treatment table and an exam couch?

The terms are often used interchangeably, but treatment tables are commonly associated with physiotherapy, rehab, and manual therapy, while exam couches may be positioned more for general clinical examination.

Who typically needs an infusion stand?

Infusion stands are used in clinics, hospitals, day-care treatment spaces, and other settings where IV fluids, drips, or related therapy support equipment need to be positioned safely beside the patient.

When should I choose a tilt table?

A tilt table is usually the better option when progressive upright positioning is required, especially in rehabilitation settings focused on supported standing, postural tolerance, or neurological recovery workflows.

Are stainless steel tables better than upholstered treatment tables?

They serve different purposes. Stainless steel tables are generally preferred in procedural or surgical environments where hygiene and cleaning protocols are a top priority. Upholstered tables are typically better for therapy, assessment, and patient comfort.

What should I look for in a stretcher trolley?

Check maneuverability, braking and locking systems, patient load capacity, transfer height, wheel quality, frame durability, and how easily it fits through your treatment or corridor layout.

Can this category support both human and veterinary practices?

Yes, but only if the product specifications match the intended use. Veterinary tables and surgical furniture should be clearly separated in filtering and product labeling so buyers can choose the correct equipment confidently.

What matters most when buying clinic furniture?

The main factors are intended use, patient positioning needs, stability, mobility, cleaning requirements, weight capacity, durability, and whether the equipment fits the workflow of your treatment room.