My elderly mother, age 70, who lives with me, has urinary incontinence and wears "incontinence underwear." She is good about changing them when needed but she is horrible about disposing of them. Most of the time, she just piles them in a corner in her room and maybe twice a week will gather them up into a trash bag to be disposed of. She lives with me, and her room reeks of urine. Absolutely disgusting urine permeated air hits you every time she opens her bedroom door. I bought her a "diaper pail" to put them in, but rather than put it is as soon as she takes it off, she places it in a corner in her room and after she has several of them will then put all of them into the pail. I remind her several times a week to use the pail every single time she changes her underwear, and I don't understand why she doesn't. She has never been very good at keeping things clean and put away, even when I was growing up. I have installed an air deodorizer that releases a medical grade deodorizing spray every 15 minutes and have given her a spray bottle of the same product to spray directly on her used underwear when she removes them, which she doesn't use. The automatic deodorizer spray has had some effect, lessened the urine smell some, but the main issue is getting her to dispose of the used undergarments correctly. I was even hoping to take her to her doctor and maybe a talk from him would help, but she refuses to go, and since she has not been deemed incompetent, I can't force her to go. Sometimes the odor is so strong it creeps into other rooms even though her door has been shut for hours. I am at my wit's end and don't know what else I can do.
Is something preventing you from tossing mom's diapers on a daily basis?
You might check out Teepa Snow's videos on dealing with folks with dementia, whether or not she's been diagnosed, you might find some good techniques there.
Before you decide that this is just "mom being mom" and "she's always been lazy", I would check further into her current cognitive skills. Dementia comes in many forms; some of them rob folks of their sense of smell, some of their ability to sequence what they are doing. I think the more you know, the more you'll be able to figure out what you need to do to make having mom live with you work.
Unfortunately in this case, as it stands, it does seem to be "mom being mom". My father and I were the ones who handled the brunt of de-cluttering when I was growing up. She would do the dishes, mop floors, etc., but she would always just pile things up to be put away "later" (and even the cleaning she did do wouldn't be done on a timely basis). My father washed his hands of her a few years ago, as she wasn't willing to keep up with the cleaning but when he tried to do it, she would yell at him to stop. He had a stroke a few months before that, and she thought that made him incapable of doing anything - he actually recovered just fine, thank goodness. He provided her money for a while after he left, but it got to the point where she was taking more than he was getting to keep, so he left her with just her tiny Social Security and thus she moved in with me.
Before I resort to doing all of the cleaning up and spraying of her room myself, I think I may start treating her like I would my son when he was younger where I will literally every day tell her to clean her room and spray the deodorizer and try to get this to develop as a daily habit. Other than that, I guess I'm going to have to pick up the underwear a few times a day (which by the way she doesn't even fold up - they are left sitting with the wet urine pad wide open to the air) and spray the deodorizer.
Strangely enough, this is exactly how my grandmother (my mother's mom) got in her older years...she would not do anything. My grandfather did all the chores, all the cooking and cleaning, while she just sat there listening to the radio and playing solitaire. I sure hope this isn't a trait I develop as I get older!!!!
I do want to add in my mom's defense as I haven't painted the prettiest picture of her, that she was a great mom to me, couldn't have asked for a better one. Always there for my school/activity functions, would play taxi to me and my friends, fun trips together, making sure I was able to get the "cool shoes" or other such things....a lot of great memories growing up. I love her so much, even if she is driving me crazy with this issue right now.
My mom has vascular dementia; she routinely scores 15/15 on the mini-mental (has no short term memory issues) but can't reason or plan at all.
One person had mentioned a Diaper Genie. A couple of my kids used them with their babies. They will fill up mush more quickly with adult diapers, but the smell is pretty much gone. You'll have to be the one to use it, she obviously isn't going to.
Since she has had poor hygiene previously, this seems to be a case of "becoming more like yourself" as you age. Your personality traits are more pronounced and your deficits are also more noticeable. I know I drive my kids nuts with my oddities--and I'm only 60.
Honestly, no amount of sprays are going to eliminate the odor of urine. You can reduce it to a degree--but---it will be soaked into everything.
We do have a Diaper Genie - well, an adult version of it - and it is very simple to use and completely contains the smell...she just won't put them in it until she has a pile of several of them.
Regarding the spray I have been using that eliminates the odor, it is Ni-712 by Neutron Industries. It is pricey but it does work and eliminates the odor for several hours.
Since I do daily household chores, I am going to try to get her involved in it....announcing it is time to clean so she should gather up all garbage and underwear from her room so I can take it out with the trash and then spray her room. I'm hopeful this may work. It is what I did to help "train" my son to keep his room clean, and he still does it to this day.
Thanks for all of your suggestions.
Maybe instead of staying stuck on 'the' pail, you could put a few different types in different locations in the room and see if she takes to one. I wonder if there isn't a counting or scorekeeping thing going on in her head. You might try some kind of labeling or checkmark board/visual on some of the pails, that might satisfy an oddity in her mind. Oh you could try getting multiple matching hand towels that you put in one place and she can stack up one by one next to the container to keep score, as it were, as she deposits the diapers? Just thoughts, you get the idea. Good luck! :) :)
Some brief background: I was unable to use kitty litter, because one kitty would bury his poop so enthusiastically, that the 4 large litter boxes would become like minefields of little pieces of his poop or urine. That distressed the 3 other kitties. So now I use paper towels instead of traditional litter. When a kitty urinates or poops, I clean the litter boxes immediately and replace the old paper towels with fresh paper towels.
Here’s how I avoid bad smells: I have a lidded plastic paint bucket. I line the inside of the bucket with a plastic bag. I put a few spoonfuls of baking soda in the plastic bag. As the paper towels are soiled, I place them inside the plastic bag, which is inside the paint bucket. I later take the plastic bag to the outside garbage can. As for the ambient smells, I use “Air Scense,” a natural air freshener, which comes in various scents. (I like citrus the best, but vanilla is also nice.)
You might want to do the same thing with your mother’s pads. Have a lidded paint bucket (they come in various sizes), line it with a plastic bag (optional step, but it makes depositing the soiled pads easier), and throw in some baking soda. Place the bucket in your mom’s preferred stashing place. Tell your mom to put her soiled pads inside the bucket then put the lid over them. Empty the bucket when it is filled. Maybe she will follow instructions.
In extreme cases, when there is any kind of strong smell I don’t like, I burn incense. You might want to consider burning some incense at first, to remove the existing smells. You can open windows at the same time, if the smoke bothers anyone. When the smell isn’t too bad, air freshener will work.
As for getting rid of the smell, you're just going to have to throw open all of your doors and windows, even during winter and just get out for a while. There's nothing like fresh air to get rid of the odor. Anything left over at the end of the day can use a strong spritz of Lysol air sanitizer
I agree with other commenters that 70 is definitely not "elderly". Maybe so back in the 1950s and 1960s, but nowadays, you are not elderly until age range 78 - 90. I think your mother is being not only lazy but also provocative, and this may be a reaction to a feeling of being nagged. As she is living in your house, giving you this odour problem, the only thing you can do is be very firm with her and put more than one covered bin in her room, and make her pick up and bin her soiled diapers while you are watching. Your roles are definitely reversed now - you are the mother, and she the child.
This reminds me when one of my kids was in twos and threes, she would play too long and wet her pants. Then, the would come in the house, put on clean panties and place the wet, dirty ones in the drawer with the clean clothes. Hadn't thought about that for years.
Move the pail (without a lid-so she doesn't have to open it) to the corner where she throws them. Place a diaper pail deodorizer (or 2) in the pail. Spray the lining of the pail bag with a urine neutralizing agent (found in pet stores or patient supply stores). You can also spray it in the diapers BEFORE she puts them on. Keep solid air fresheners in her room and keep the window at least partially open in the warmer months. Try a fan in the room to dissipate the smell.
Smell diminishes as we age. My dad couldn't smell his own body odor but it would hit me in the face when I'd walk in his apartment. Maybe her sense of smell is gone and she honestly can't smell her own diapers. Tell her you can smell her odor, she might be embarrassed and want to change her ways. A drastic measure would be to use one of those disposable face masks when you walk in her room.
If you are working, there is really no way for you to monitor her habits when you're gone. The only thing you can do is talk to her, that you want her to place her used diapers in the pail (which you have-and she won't) and empty the room of her diapers when you get home and every couple of hours while you're awake, then before you leave in the morning.
Is there a reason she doesn't change her diaper in the bathroom? Have you given her "baby wipes" to clean up with before she puts on a new diaper? The urine also sticks to the skin and causes a smell. It might cut down on the smell FROM HER SKIN around the diaper area. They even have warming units to heat the wipes. Maybe, if she could wipe herself, she could throw them both in the garbage.
By the way, the Nappy Sacks brand really work well. I don't know if they're available anymore but other scent containing bags are available. Twenty-eight years ago, when my son was a baby, I left a #1 and #2 diaper tied up in a scent bag in a hot trunk of the car for 6 hours and, when I opened the trunk, I had no idea a diaper was in there! They work.
Sometimes, you just have to give in (if you can) and accept that's how it is. If not, can she live somewhere else? Get a Social Worker involved.
Some people have more a 'acute' sense of smell (see thread on this board) than others and some folks just can't take it and wind up gagging.
Good luck.
While I am sorry to use this analogy, maybe you need to place the pail where she is comfortable dumping the used undies. You might even leave an opened garbage bag (spread out on the floor) in the corner where she is dumping them - for her to dump them on - some of them come with deodorizer.
I had better luck with my dad when I allowed him to choose the how of things. Right now I accumulate soiled washcloths with my DH and instead of a diaper-pail with bleach, I am using an ice cream bucket with a bit of pre-surgical scrub - and liquid soap mixed together in water, and no smell. Just a thought. Brand name: Hibiclens but there are generic brands too - and it kills all bacteria and is microbial.