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Tips to avoid falls...
...and near misses, based on personal experience. Bet you've got some, also.
1. Do not walk faster than your cane. 2. When taking a shower, do not suddenly raise your arms to shampoo your hair and close your eyes at the same time. 3. Do not attempt to answer your cordless/cell phone while carrying laundry downstairs. 4. When putting on underwear, do not attempt to put both legs in the same opening. |
B2Y, you are so wise. I was falling a lot but since I parked my b*** in my WC I've only fallen once in the last 2 years while transferring to the toilet. I vow never to fall again!!
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make sure your shoes are tied BEFORE you stand up. once you are up, its too tempting to just bend over and tie them. :o
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The stairs are the scariest place for me...when I carry the laundry down to the basement, I lean against the wall and take one step at a time like a toddler. I have fallen more than a couple of times and don't want a repeat.
When I read about putting on underwear, it resonated with me. I have to learn to sit down to get dressed. It's so difficult when you have balance issues to put one leg in at a time...I also have trouble washing my feet in the shower, but I'm unwilling to get a shower chair yet. Guess I just want to keep on pretending I don't have MS:rolleyes: |
Something that works very well to scrub the soles of your feet if you are not using a shower chair: http://www.amazon.com/Soapy-Soles-Fo.../dp/B003DLTG2G
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#1. Don't get up.:D
#2. Don't try to tranfer from your scooter to the sofa, if you just installed slippery wood floors and you haven't, yet, put down a non-slip carpet.:rolleyes: #3. If you do, call the hunks at 911.:p |
I slide my laundry basket down the stairs on its own. I just pick up what fell out at the bottom. I am not able to carry it and navigate the stairs. It slides easily if you aim it.
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I like the "do not walk faster than your cane" tip B2Y. I tend to trip right over it on a regular basis. I might be better off without it :D.
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I thought I was being very very very careful on the stairs at my nephew's
home in Seattle, where I stayed several months last spring. All the bedrooms, including mine, upstairs. But one night I was trying to carry a recipe book downstairs for his grandaughter, and I fell down the stairs and broke my kneecap. thus started a grim lesson in what happens if one has stairs. Now, I won't go into places with a full flight of steep stairs. I do negotiate several broad stairs in my son's home, but I have to hang onto the wall or have a grandchild help, as it is very dangerous. I calculate every step. My knee healed very well and is now the least of my health woes. But the "Medicare" nightmare concerning the break was incredibly bad. The hospital where I was taken by 911 (I could not walk at all) said Medicare would NOT cover a broken kneecap. Since I could not return to the house, I was told to go to a motel and order pizza (I could not use the bathroom unaided either). But they kept me overnight because they couldn't find the exact type of brace they needed for my knee, and then they kept me on "Observation" for four days so that I would not be eligible for a Medicare nursing home (yes, they did this literally, as far as I know). I was hardly on Observation, as I was given quite a lot of supervision of using a walker, getting out of bed, getting onto the commode, etc. But I cried a lot because of the fear that I would not have enough money to pay myself for a nursing home for the several months projected that it would take to heal. So, because I cried, they put me on suicide watch and had a psychiatrist come to interview me, with three grim interns. I told him I was not suicidal, just depressed about my quandry. He seemed interested that I had an MS dx, but also seemed to squelch the thoughts which arose because of that. So I had to go to an Assisted Living place where it was not in their job description to help me use the toilet even though I had a cast foot to hip (my leg was being set in this way, without surgery, and that worked very well). I finally had to urinate standing up, but then I did get a commode which I ordered myself which I could use. The Occupational Therapist was NO help, but charged thousands of dollars for coming out and making out papers. finally I had a TIA, and was sent to a different hospital, where they said "Of course you qualify for Medicare nursing home with a broken leg and cast from foot to hip". So they sent me, after six weeks without, to a good nursing home, where I was for five weeks and had rehab. And then had to go to another assisted living place until I was able to go home. The hospital which denied me nursing home care was one with a very high reputation, as was the hospital which found me a good nursing home later. This shows how different interpretations of the laws can be. I have neuropathy in my feet, which has become worse since I got Polycythemia Vera 5 years ago, so that is one reason why my feet are numb and dangerous. But I exercise them daily and use very good foot care on them. The Interferon I am taking for PV increases the neuropathy pain, although I am told that if I get my platelets down I may have less pain than before. None of this was considered at all by the hospital which denied nursing home care. My home is wheelchair accessible because my late husband was in a wheelchair. I use his chair when my feet hurt too much, and thank God for both the house and the wheelchair, now needed by me. I realize that elder care is very expensive, $8000 to $13000 in Seattle in a nursing home, and that our gov't may indeed go bankrupt over this. So I know it's a huge problem for our country as well as for us. |
Your story makes me want to cry. I am not depressed, just sad and angry.
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