Effortless Wireless Bed Connectivity. No Cords. No Compromises.




How It Works
BlueJack replaces your traditional bed cables with a wireless adapter that transmits bed status data directly to your nurse call system. It’s designed for durability, instant reconnection, and seamless integration – no more broken cords or risky downtime.
- Eliminates broken cords and daily disconnects, giving nurses a safer, smoother workflow without constant troubleshooting.
- Connects any bed to any nurse call system, enabling wireless flexibility without replacing existing infrastructure.
- Transmits critical life-safety alerts wirelessly and reliably, even if the bed isn’t plugged in. For hospitals that require additional signals, BlueJack can be used in parallel with a 37-pin cable to maintain full coverage.
BlueJack Features

Universal Compatibility
Connect any bed to any nurse call system — no infrastructure replacement needed.

Automated Safety
Wireless pairing ensures fall alarms and safety alerts always get through, without staff having to lift a finger.

Informed Care Team
Display real-time bed status and alerts via HallMonitor™, staff phones, or central dashboards.
Which statuses does BlueJack transmit?
Bed exit alarm, emergency call button, and whether or not the bed itself is connected.
Are batteries required?
No – the BlueJack bed unit receives power directly from the bed’s power connection.
Can a 37-pin cable be used in parallel to BlueJack?
Yes – a 37-pin cable can be optionally connected through BlueJack to transmit full wired data.
Which beds & nurse call systems does BlueJack support?
BlueJack is compatible with most beds (HillRom, Stryker, Umano, Linet) and most nurse call systems (Responder 4 & 5, HillRom, Westcom, Jeron, and others).
How does the wireless connection work?
BlueJack uses a line-of-sight infrared ping similar to a TV remote to establish location and trigger pairing between the wall and the bed unit – after which it forms a direct bluetooth connection to transmit the data – fully hands free & automatic.
What happens if it is a double room?
BlueJack will auto-pair to the first unpaired wall receiver it detects. If unintentionally cross-connected, press the button on the wall unit to unpair and the bed unit will re-pair to the aligned wall unit.
Weight
0.3 lb (wall unit)
0.5 lb (bed unit with batteries)
Power Draw (Wall Unit)
5V @ 30 mA (nurse call)
5V @ 200 mA (external)
Power Draw (Bed Unit)
3x AA Batteries, 4.5V @ 0.2 mA
Material
ABS UL V0 rated, UV stabilizing & antimicrobial additives
Data Transmission
In-room location verification with infrared emitter on bed side & receiver on wall side, paired bed data sent over BLE
Call Types
Emergency call & bed exit
Dimensions
3.3” W x 5.0” H x 1.3” D (wall unit)
10.0” W x 1.3” H x 1.3” D (bed unit)
Transmission Frequency
Placed calls, IR & BLE heartbeat every 60s
Cleaning
Stable with standard hospital surface cleaners
Battery Life
Wired power (wall unit)
1 Year (bed unit)
Interfaces (Wall Unit)
1x 37 pin nurse call connection, 1x 37 pin bed pass through & 1x physical unpair button
Interfaces (Bed Unit)
1x 37 pin bed connection with splitter & 1x external IR blaster
Regulatory
FDA Registered
Download the spec sheet to get the full technical breakdown of BlueJack. See how BlueJack seamlessly connects any bed to any nurse call system while enhancing patient safety and care team efficiency.
Step-by-step instructions for mounting, wiring, and pairing BlueJack. This guide covers wall and bed-side installation, power setup, proper positioning for reliable IR pairing, post-install testing, and troubleshooting tips to ensure a smooth setup.
Which statuses does BlueJack transmit?
Bed exit alarm, emergency call button, and whether or not the bed itself is connected.
Are batteries required?
No – the BlueJack bed unit receives power directly from the bed’s power connection.
Can a 37-pin cable be used in parallel to BlueJack?
Yes – a 37-pin cable can be optionally connected through BlueJack to transmit full wired data.
Which beds & nurse call systems does BlueJack support?
BlueJack is compatible with most beds (HillRom, Stryker, Umano, Linet) and most nurse call systems (Responder 4 & 5, HillRom, Westcom, Jeron, and others).
How does the wireless connection work?
BlueJack uses a line-of-sight infrared ping similar to a TV remote to establish location and trigger pairing between the wall and the bed unit – after which it forms a direct bluetooth connection to transmit the data – fully hands free & automatic.
What happens if it is a double room?
BlueJack will auto-pair to the first unpaired wall receiver it detects. If unintentionally cross-connected, press the button on the wall unit to unpair and the bed unit will re-pair to the aligned wall unit.
Weight
0.3 lb (wall unit)
0.5 lb (bed unit with batteries)
Dimensions
3.3” W x 5.0” H x 1.3” D (wall unit)
10.0” W x 1.3” H x 1.3” D (bed unit)
Power Draw (Wall Unit)
5V @ 30 mA (nurse call)
5V @ 200 mA (external)
Power Draw (Bed Unit)
3x AA Batteries, 4.5V @ 0.2 mA
Material
ABS UL V0 rated, UV stabilizing & antimicrobial additives
Data Transmission
In-room location verification with infrared emitter on bed side & receiver on wall side, paired bed data sent over BLE
Call Types
Emergency call & bed exit
Transmission Frequency
Placed calls, IR & BLE heartbeat every 60s
Cleaning
Stable with standard hospital surface cleaners
Battery Life
Wired power (wall unit)
1 Year (bed unit)
Interfaces (Wall Unit)
1x 37 pin nurse call connection, 1x 37 pin bed pass through & 1x physical unpair button
Interfaces (Bed Unit)
1x 37 pin bed connection with splitter & 1x external IR blaster
Regulatory
FDA Registered
Download the spec sheet to get the full technical breakdown of BlueJack. See how BlueJack seamlessly connects any bed to any nurse call system while enhancing patient safety and care team efficiency.
Step-by-step instructions for mounting, wiring, and pairing BlueJack. This guide covers wall and bed-side installation, power setup, proper positioning for reliable IR pairing, post-install testing, and troubleshooting tips to ensure a smooth setup.