Yesterday I went to visit with my in-laws and FIL was waddling with his feet spread wider apart than I've ever seen. Last month my husband saw his dad waddling and asked him to start using a cane but FIL said he didn't need one. MIL is in a wheelchair and FIL pushes it so he has something on which to steady himself but that only works when they're together.
For the last 6 months he has lost his balance frequently. For the last couple of months he underwent another round of MRIs, heart monitors, full checkups by a neurologist, cardiologist, and internist, and once again all tests came back normal. He's doing PT and balance exercises but it's not really helping.
For a man as vain as he is, I would have thought FIL would rather use a cane than look ridiculous waddling around like a duck. I found a Royal Canes black and maple model that is ergonomic, folding, and adjustable. It's not cheap. With the holidays coming up I could give it to him as a present but he is notorious for opening gifts and throwing them in the closet.
I just don't know what I should do. I don't want him to fall and hurt himself. That would ruin everything we've accomplished by moving them into independent living.
With the holidays coming I feel like this the only big window of opportunity to help him accept that his waddling is worse and noticeable, and that it's not a matter of 'if' he falls but 'when.'
My husband tells me this isn't our problem but I can't stop feeling sorry for my FIL and worried about him because he has been nothing but good to me.
In fact one of our family friends who is in his 80's fell yesterday and fractured his hip. He was walking in the street alone when he fell yesterday. This man should never have been out of his house alone. Anyway, they aren't sure he's strong enough to undergo surgery.
If your FIL is open to information and clear thinking, perhaps a couple of stories like mine might make a difference. You can try. Good luck.
I don't recall the reason we explored use of a rollator, but Dad found it to be so much more effective when he tested in at a DME store. Medicare paid for it.
As FF says, it's a different method of support, height adjusted to the user, with handlebars and locking mechanism for the wheels. What makes it easier to use is that it's far more stable and protective than a walker. The user can also stop, sit down and rest on the seat, which can't be done with a walker. So it's more versatile as well.
It's a 4 wheeled device, whereas a walker may have 2 wheels and 2 "stubs", or all 4 legs end in the rubber stubs/caps.
Walkers do NOT move as easily as rollators, but walkers do provide more support than canes, to which I'm really opposed because they can cause someone to lean to one side and limp, and they provide no support whatsoever if someone begins to go down.
A few years ago I had a mysterious literally spontaneous knee injury which make it almost impossible to walk w/o support. I used a dowel I had planned to use for a clothing rod, and learned to limp through the house. But I didn't really feel safe and held onto furniture or whatever I could to steady myself. When I get old, I shall not use a cane.
We now use the rollator basket for the portable oxygen concentrator, which makes walking so much easier. With just a walker, Dad would have to have someone walk with him and haul the concentrator. That in effect would discourage walking.
Dad is able to get the portable concentrator plus the rollator out of his house, down the steps, and out for a stroll.
And BTW, he's 97 and has had 2 fractured femurs.
The rolling walker has hand brakes, plus a seat to sit whenever one get tired walking. Under the seat which opens up there is a wire basket which comes in handy. It's almost like walking with the wheelchair, similar concept. The walkers come in a vary of colors so maybe he would enjoy a bright red one or cobalt blue. Hope he would accept that.
I know how vain some elders can be. My Mom didn't want Dad to take his rolling walker outside as she didn't want the neighbors to think Dad was elderly.... HELLO he is in his mid-90's. Dad eventually won and takes the walker out when getting the mail.... I bet the neighbors are thinking "well, it's about time he got one of those".
Oh, I had to wait until my Dad fell backwards on his driveway, a trip to the ER and physical therapy to tell him to get that walker.
After 3 days the caregivers were history, she thought she could manage with my Dad there in the house [who was a major fall risk himself].... a week later wham, down Mom went again but this time she hit her head on the kitchen counter.... called 911...
Mom is now bedridden and living in a nursing home. In a couple of weeks she went from being pretty sharp for someone 97, to accelerated dementia due to the brain trauma. The same thing could happen to Dad-in-law, and that would leave Mom-in-law by herself. Hopefully it will give him something to think about.
When you point things out in a simple way, they just don't seem to grasp it. I can't fathom that a person with full mental capacity would be that much in denial. That's just my take on it. To me, it's a signal of cognitive decline, so there are likely other things of concern going on.
When we moved her to AL, they wanted her to use a walker - she refused. She is as stubborn as they come and felt it would make her look old (she's almost 101) She was in AL for 8 months and fell, three times we know about - many more we have figured she didn't tell anyone about.
She finally put herself in a NH with her last fall. She has fallen there once and in the hospital - she lives a charmed life - never broke a bone. God is watching out for her for sure. But, so many falls, she is now not even strong enough to use the walker any more and is in a wheelchair. I think if she had been willing to use it in the first place, she would still be in AL and in a lot better health emotionally and figuratively. If your father would use a walker, I'd go with that. Once mom had the cane, she wouldn't give it up for the walker.
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