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My mother is 97 years old and has late-stage Alzheimer's. She can’t take care of herself and needs assistance with all her daily needs (can’t walk, talk, bathe or feed herself and is incontinent,) She gets upset and pulls back her hand when I try to cut her finger nails. Sometimes this results in an unintentional pinch to her finger which only exacerbates the situation. She won’t let me file them either. Does anyone have any tips on the best way to cut her nails?
Thanks!

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Maybe you should buy a good nail file, and gently hold your mother’s hand and file the nails as much as you can while talking to her.
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Why are you trying to cut her fingernails if she's in a nursing home?

Have the staff do it.
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Good cop, bad cop?

Have another person present. Someone kind to hold her other hand, chat & distract her (while you deal with the claws).

"Let's get these nails cut then it's time for icecream!" 😁😊
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I used to have a whole pampering mani/pedi routine that some of the clients would enjoy. Put them in their comfortable chair, do a soak in warm soapy water, file, and put lotion and do a skin massage. If you focus on the "pampering" it might be fun rather than embarrassing to need the help. Otherwise they can do it for them at doctor visits and you schedule the visits for the increments of time they'll need the clipping.
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I bring my Mom to the Podiatrist every 3 months because she would jerk her feet and nails at the Nail Salons and they refused to do her anymore. I do her nails when she can't but feet, I leave to Doctor.
Or do while they are dozing, like you would do an infants or toddler's.
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Edit: Cutting nail may cause more problems *than* worth the cut.
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Cnbkra: Unless her nails are quite long, perhaps you would want to choose to leave them be as you are risking an "unintentional pinch to the finger." Also, elders' skin is often very thin so the pinch to the finger may cause more problems that worth the nail cut, e.g. long term healing of damaged skin. This is not the first time that this question has come up here on the forum. On another note, as she is residing in a nursing home, perhaps one of the staff will be able to accomplish this task.
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Can your mother get around either on foot or in a wheelchair ?

if so you can go to a local senior center … im not talking about a day care center tho maybe they can help you ? I mean a senior center with activities and/or food … or call an office on aging about it.

our center has a nail clinic and you can say … hey mom ! Lets get your fingernails cut. No i dont need to have mine done yet but we can get yours done now 😺

maybe she’ll cooperate if “someone special” will cut hers.

if not a senior center research carefully !!! And take her a regular salon … but make sure they know how to deal with elderly nails.

ours did toenails too.
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Try baby clippers. They are sharper and cut better. The other suggestions about making sure the nails are soft after soaking or bathing are great ideas. Alsoo, hold tight so that she cannot pull away.
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What type of clipper do you use? I found that The kind that is like a broad head scissors that you squeeze together or the type you press down on? The press down type makes a louder CLICK then the scissor type. File them when they are dry, cut after soak. If possible, make it a pleasant, relaxed experience. Be sure to both be sitting comfortably and start a conversation to distract. Lots of fragrant soap suds to soak and hand cream to finish. Try and relax yourself so that you don’t anticipate that click and jerk moment. Best regards, that nail routine is tough:(
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My 95 yo mother doesn't like her nails clipped either.

However, she likes to "tap tap tap" on the table impatiently.
She will pick at her scalp and her face and make sore places

I just sit down with clippers and go at it and she'll just whine and fuss, which I ignore. If she tries to pull her hand back, I just keep gently taking hold of her finger.

Then I hand her a fingernail file and tell her to smooth out her nails, which she will do.

She doesn't get to run the show.
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If you can do the nails after a bath when the nails are softer.
If that does not work then when she is asleep do a nail. Might take more than 1 day to do all her nails but they will eventually get done. Think of it as your Golden Gate Bridge. (I read once that they paint the bridge and when they start at one side by the time they get it all done it needs to be done again. Never ending....)
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Your mom is giving you the hard time because you are the primary caretaker.

Try to get her in to a manicurist. She may be better behaved with a new/different person.

If it works out with your budget, it may be useful to have a CNA come in to shower her and take care of her nails. Their training in working with ALZ patients is helpful.
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I do a full clean of mums nails and keep them to minimum because she has a habit of scratching all kinds of things, herself and dirty plates, surfaces etc. also she still wipes herself and at times “things” have got caught underneath her nails.
I soak, I cut, I clean underneath and then we apply moisturizer. Sometimes I also apply sanitizer first. The key with anything I do for Mum is to make it spa like. Whether it’s her hair, shower or nails.
And there are some better clippers out there than the rest.

I find it strange that nails are not done in care facilities. Reason being my late brother who had a disability would often get gunk underneath his nails, then he’d scratch a sore and the matter would get into his blood stream and cause infection. Few times he was in hospital for that.

I know now if I didn’t keep mums nails short, there’d most likely be fecal matter at some point getting in her blood stream as she’s always had allergies/itchy skin/sores.
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I agree with BarbBrooklyn if she seems to be a hard sleeper at times. When my sons were babies, I often cut their nails when they were asleep. Even if you only get one done before disturbing her, it is progress. I have not dealt with this yet but perhaps her doctor would do it if she is having regular appointments.
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My mother did the same, but I was able to hold her finger gently but firmly enough to keep it in place for nail clipping. I got a small sharp clipper that worked well and fast. My mother also had facial hair as she aged. I used a Flawless batter-run circulating shaver for that. She also recoiled at first, but then got used to it. It doesn't hurt. I also ended up being the one to give her haircuts, as I had to catch her for short periods of time in whatever position she was in.
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What will happen when the nails get too long, then leave them go, then some break? Yes, get Mom some medication to relax her. I think a manicurist will cut and file the nails.
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Nurses, LPNs and CNAs/aides are not allowed to cut fingernails or toenails. For toenails you need to go to a podiatrist. Have no idea how fingernails get done when no one is allowed to do them. Oh, the aides will paint someones nails but don't think they file, but they may. I hated it when they did Moms nails, who never wore nail polish, because it would peal off and they didn't remove it. I brought in nail remover pads.
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If you think it’s OK to try, I’ll share this, as it’s helped for me. I was having trouble cutting my toenails, particularly the bits of skin or nail that sometimes stick out and catch, but don’t go well with nail scissors or files. DH lent me his ‘electronic side-cutters’. They are not powered, the name is because they are used in electronics for cutting tiny wires, and they cut absolutely flush. I pull the flesh gently away from what I want to cut, and cut the little bit that’s sticking up – or across the nail if it all needs cutting. They cost about $10 in tool shop. Something tells me that they are quite probably what podiatrists use themselves!

I now have my own, and I got quite cross with DH for using them for years on himself (as well as in electronics), without telling me how useful they are. If you want to try, try on yourself first to get an idea of how close they cut, and be careful. In fact if I was cutting someone else’s nails, I would still have the basin of warm water, the nice soft towel, demonstrate on myself first, and probably just start with the nail that is being annoying. A good first try always helps!
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JoAnn29 Sep 2022
Great idea. I have read that as we age our toenails get thicker and harder to cut. I do my DHs and have broken a clipper trying to go his.
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Leave her fingernails alone unless they are causing her some kind of problem, like she's scratching herself in the face with them and bleeding. At this stage of disease, unless you use calming meds to sedate her, it doesn't sound like you'll be able to accomplish this task w/o hurting her. By all means, watch Teepa Snow to see if the hand under hand technique would work, but if not, I'd just leave her alone honestly. If there's a situation going on that demands her nails be trimmed, and if she's on hospice, ask the hospice nurse to do it after she gives her some Ativan or Xanax to sedate her with.

Here's a thread on this very subject from 2015 you may find helpful, IDK. I did not read all the responses myself.

https://www.agingcare.com/questions/moms-wont-let-anyone-care-for-her-fingernails-187777.htm?orderby=recent

Good luck!
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Consider cutting while she is asleep.

I do this with my 5 year granddaughter who once got "pinched" with a nail clipper by the other grandma.
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How did your mother care for her nails when she used to do them herself? Do you remember?

If I were doing this job (we're actually not allowed to cut nails, too much can go wrong) I'd start with a manicure, and possibly do my own first to show her what's happening. E.g. take a basin of warm water and let her soak her hands first, rest them on a fluffy towel, start with some nice hand cream and a little massage, and move gently on by stages. This will work better if she ever was the kind of person who went to salons or otherwise took the beauty business seriously.

But if someone just took your hand and set about cutting or filing your nails, you'd pull back too.

If she still won't let you, sanitizing hand wipes and a cotton bud under the nails are better than nothing.
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I wonder if Teepa Snow's hand under hand technique would be helpful 🤔

Here are a couple of videos giving you the basic idea

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iKT9YIVPREE

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6gLrH8mioCw
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