How to test a mattress in a stationary store?
The mattress cannot be tested in a stationary store. The conditions that prevail there do not in any way reflect those prevailing during sleep. We do not sleep in clothes, with light and under the supervision of the controllers or customers around us. our bodies are strengthened while we sleep, which we cannot help. In addition, the materials from which the mattresses are made can last for several hours to reveal their properties.
Can a mattress conform to the spine?
Yes. Choosing the right one affects the fact that it will not provide proper body support and movement in an upright position. This, in turn, leads to pain in the spine, and also causes or aggravates its diseases. Therefore, people who care about their spine should pay attention to choosing the perfect mattress.
Can two people of the same weight sleep on the same mattress?
Yes. Mattress firmness and types are not selected based on weight. Height and weight determine the number of weight accumulation points, but this on good mattresses is distributed outside. Thus, a mattress with a mattress with an increased content, which is 6.5 for especially 93%, will be suitable for people of weight and height.
Will a physiotherapist help me choose a mattress?
No. Generally physiotherapists are not taught about mattresses in any way. So they have no idea what mattresses are made of and what properties specific materials have. Most often, they also do not know how to choose the firmness of the mattress. Physiotherapists found in stationary stores very often limit themselves to tests that have no substantive basis. Their task is, as a rule, to give the impression that a given store cares about the health of customers in a professional manner. Their presence increases the authority of the store in the eyes of the average consumer. Their knowledge, however, is useful at the stage of designing mattresses, but only a few physiotherapists have an idea about it.
Are supermarket mattresses good?
No. More often than not, the mattresses sold in supermarkets are characterized by extremely low quality and ridiculously high margins. Both those sold for a few hundred euros, and produced for about a hundred euro, and those sold for several thousand euros, and produced for several hundred euros. In addition, so far it has probably not happened that a mattress from a supermarket has a full specification of the materials used in its production, and above all, the type, density and hardness of polyurethane foams.