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A Guide to Safe Guarding Your Home
For many people, their home represents their life accomplishments; this is
especially true for individuals diagnosed with dementia or Alzheimer’s Disease
and their caregivers. Most families want to keep their loved one at home
for as long as possible so the person can be in familiar surroundings. Therefore,
it is important to create a safe environment for your loved one to live in
while they can still remain at home.
When caring for a senior with Alzheimer’s or memory problems
in the home it is important to avoid accidents, minimize injuries in the
event of an accident, and remove “triggers” that could cause agitation or
challenging behaviors.
The following are suggestions for safe proofing your home. It is important
to accommodate the needs of the caregiver as well as the senior with
dementia. There are no fixed rules. Each person’s home is different, just
like each person with dementia or Alzheimer’s related memory loss.
There will be unique behaviors or characteristics that require continual
reassessment. Be sure to walk throughout the home as the disease progresses
to monitor it for safety issues that may arise.
1. Start with a Plan—Survey your home thoroughly prior to making changes.
Look for areas and items that could be hazardous to your loved one. Survey
the home as if you were the senior person with dementia then decide
what area should be tackled first. The following suggestions can assist you
with beginning your plan:
Þ
Simplify—As Alzheimer’s Disease progresses, it becomes
more difficult for seniors to process environmental information. The
simpler things are in the home, the fewer environmental inputs there are
to interpret and distract the person.
Þ
Create walking paths throughout the home—Paths should be
as straight and direct as possible. For example, a path from the kitchen
to the dining room will need to be free of furniture and decorative items
(ALL THROW RUGS SHOULD BE REMOVED).
Þ
Reduce clutter—Open spaces make both access and decision
making easier, while decreasing the potential for over-stimulation.
Þ
Utilize labels—Labeling areas and items in the home may provide
visual cues to maintain the senior's independence within the household.
For example, attaching pictures of silverware outside the utensil
drawer or hanging a “BATHROOM” sign on the bathroom door. It
is important to use symbols and/or the language the person can relate to
at their current level of function. Therefore, it may be necessary to change
the kind of labels you use as the cognitive level changes.
2. Identify “Zones” in your home – Think of your home in terms of
zones as you start to develop a plan. As you survey your home, look at all
cabinets, drawers, doors, and living spaces as one of the following zones:
Þ
Danger Zone — This is an area that should be off-limits to
your loved one. This zone includes any places, objects or features that may
be potentially dangerous. These types of rooms should be secured and can
be used to store breakables, tools, chemicals, or any other items deemed
unsafe for seniors with dementia. Doors leading to these rooms should
be kept locked and alarmed if possible.
Examples Include:
- Garage (access to a car, tools, garden chemicals, etc.)
- Basement
- Attics
- Workshops
- Hobby rooms (machinery, paint, etc.)
- Staircases
- Outdoors (pools, spas, unfenced areas)
- Computer rooms
- Kitchen
If you cannot lock these
areas, then removing dangerous items and/or disabling potentially dangerous
applications and machinery is a must.
Þ
Respite Zone — This space should be considered a sanctuary
for the caregiver. This is a place where the caregiver can relax undisturbed
and conduct personal affairs. Having a place to get away and have time alone
can greatly reduce burnout and stress.
Examples Include:
- Renovated attic
- Spare room
- Office in the home
Þ
Safe Zone — This zone should include everything
else in the house not identified as a danger or respite zone. It is preferable
to safety-proof a room than declare it off limits. As much of the
house as possible should remain available to the senior with Alzheimer’s
to wander, hide things, rummage and exhibit the behaviors that are common
with
the disease. This zone should be free from agitating or harmful situations.
The following are helpful hints to creating safe areas:
- Lighting — Reducing shadows and
dark areas in the home can help eliminate sights that may be misinterpreted
or trigger confusion. Ways to enhance lighting include adding night-lights
to hallways, pathways and bathrooms, and replacing light bulbs in lamps
with brighter wattages.
- Bathrooms — This room can be one
of the most dangerous rooms in the home. Possible dangers include: slips
and falls, burns, poisoning, cuts, electrocution, and drowning The
following are ways
to create a safer bathroom:
- Adding shelving units behind
the toilet to display toilet paper, clean towels, Kleenex and other
items (shelving must be able to double as a grab bar). Having these
items displayed and easily available will eliminate confusion.
- Safety proof or relocate wall
hooks, glass shelves, throw rugs, mouthwash, laxatives, sleeping aides,
cough syrup, and other medications (prescription and over the counter).
- Remove all electrical appliances
that can be dropped in water: electric razors, lighted
portable mirrors, space heaters, irons, electric rollers, hairdryers,
small radios or TV’s.
- Identify or mark hot and cold
faucets with large letters.
- Lower household hot water temperature
to 105 – 110 degrees when practical.
- Modify the door to give access
to the caregiver in case of an emergency (possibly remove the
lock, move it to an unusual place, or have it specially keyed)
- Make the room warmer – install
a heating lamp in the ceiling with a timer (space heaters are never
advised). Many people with dementia stop using the bathroom (because
it seems too cold) without being able to verbalize this discomfort.
- Install firmly mounted grab
bars along the wall of the bath/shower and toilet. Consider shower
seats and adding non-slip floor surfaces to wet areas.
- Consider eliminating exhaust
fans that whirl or make noise, as this may cause further confusion
and/or irritation.
- Kitchen—Dangers may include the
same found in bathroom zones. Reducing items on shelves and cutting out
pictures and taping them on cabinets to identify its contents are just
two ways to simplify decision making and eliminate confusion for your
loved one with Alzheimer’s. Eventually the kitchen
may become a danger zone and off limits as the disease progresses. The
following tips can be useful for safety proofing your kitchen:
- Remove products, appliances
or other items that may be dangerous and accessible such as stove knobs,
oven door handles, and chemicals.
- Remove all spoiled food from
the refrigerator and check expiration dates on all products.
- Remove any medications stored
in the refrigerator or install a lock on the door.
- Consider installing a childproof
lock on the oven to prevent it from being turned on and forgotten,
as well as, being used to store or hide household items.
- Disconnect or remove the microwave
to prevent it from becoming an 'explosive.'
- Use the fuse box or install
timers to control electrical outlets for stoves, coffee makers and
other appliances.
- Windows & Doors—Some people
with Alzheimer’s dementia will never wander; however, most do.
It is important to take the necessary precautions before your loved one
exhibits this behavior to ensure their maximum safety.
- Make “Safe Zone” doors
easy to use. Door levers are easier to operate than round, smooth,
hard to grip knobs.
- Install safety handles, locks
and/or alarms on all doors that lead outside or to “Danger Zones.”
- Make sliding glass doors as
visible as possible. Install decals at the person's eye level to prevent
the person from walking into the glass door.
- Adding fake windowpanes may
help camouflage door access to “Danger Zones.”
- Install devices on your windows
and sliding glass doors that will limit how far they can be opened.
Simple clamps or pins can easily be installed.
- Reduce glare or reflections
from windows that can be misunderstood by your loved one.
Preparing your home to care for a senior with Alzheimer's Disease
or any dementia related disorder is difficult. It is important to plan ahead
rather than react to a crisis. Careful planning, foresight, knowledge, and
patience is needed to safe proof your home. We are here to help.
Reference: The Complete Guide to Alzheimer’s Proofing Your Home, Mark L.
Warner, Purdue University Press, 1998.
Provided by Barton
House
UnCommon Alzheimer’s Care
For more information regarding safe guarding your home or any other Alzheimer’s
or dementia related care issues or concerns, please contact us at Barton
House at (877) 222-7866.
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