My husband is 68 with mild Dementia. My parents died when I was 25 so I know NOTHING about Alz/Dem. I go to an Alz. group but it is very small thank goodness. Do you control his/her meds so they take them correctly and on time. Do they want to go out less and less in the car ? Are they afraid to get in the tub now ? Have they developed a huge sweet tooth ? On and on....Let's have a spouse group. Husbands jump in here. Thank you all.
I'll pick just one of your topics to get started. My husband, Coy, loved baths. Getting in was a little iffy but I helped and he was safe. One night he couldn't get out! The water was drained and he was sitting on a full-length non skid mat, but he could not get his feet under him to stand up. I finally managed, with a gait belt, to get him into a standing position and he could then easily step out of the tub. But, ugh!, neither of us wanted to repeat that. So he showered in a stall. He got clean, but he really missed a bath.
(Think about sitting on the floor with your legs out straight in front of you. Getting to your feet from that position can give some of us a little challenge. Think about not having full control over your muscles, or being weak, and also being on a slippery surface. It doesn't surprise me at all that many older people -- with and without dementia -- tend to be wary of tubs!)
One day Coy saw an ad for a walk-in tub. We wanted it! I looked into it, and we got it. He loved it. He worried a little about the controls at first, but I was always in the bathroom when he bathed. It had air jets so he had fun bubble bathes. The main advantage was not the door. (He could still get over the side of a tub.) It was that he sat at a regular chair height and had to simply stand up at the end. No struggle to get to his feet.
A tub bath isn't necessary, of course. Coy just happened to love them. Before we got the walk-in I put a sturdy shower bench in the shower stall, and had grab bars installed. I stayed right outside the stall when he used it. (He didn't think all that fuss was necessary, but he went along with it.)
My mother, on the other hand, fought showers or tubs (even the walk-in tub) with all her might. Yet when she went into a nursing home, when the aide came and said it was her time for the shower she went off cooperatively. ??
Coy used a towel around his shoulders while the tub filled (which is much sooner than a regular tub, because the pipes are larger). I don't feel cool while the tub is filling. While the water was draining out I rinsed Coy's hair and body with the shower head wand, got him wrapped in a huge towel and he stepped out to finish drying.
I guess the piece you need to envion, Deb, (or look up a picture online) is that these tubs are tall, and the bench is about half way down the back of the tub.
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