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My mother recently had a stroke. She is 74 years old and had other serious health conditions prior to the stroke. She is completely reliant on myself, my brother, his wife and the crew of caregivers that my brother hired for her round the clock care. She is bedridden and can't do anything, even turning side to side in bed is a chore. She desperately wants to take a real bath. She had a bath fitter tub installed a few years back and loves it. My bother and I attempted to get into it once since the stroke but we would have ended up hurting her if we continued so we gave up. I've mentioned it to all of the physical therapists and care givers and they all say it's a possibility but none ever follow through. I really want this for her. What do I do?

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My aunt had a CNA through home health to bathe her. We were chatting one day and she told me about another patient who was extremely large and required a lift and a second CNA to help. So contact your home health agencies and explain your problem. She would need A doctors orders to get the services but the home health could help you with that. So in this ladies case it wasn’t the therapist who helped but the bather but the therapist could help you understand what medical equipment you would need and teach you how to use it.
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I don't know if a Hoyer Lift would work in a bathroom or not, but you could look into that. My husband too was completely bedridden for the last 22 months of his life, and the hospice aides had to give him bed baths the entire time. It's certainly better than nothing. Good luck.
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Ask an occupational therapist.

There are ways to hoist immobile patients into a bath, but working out the risk assessments and the correct routine is no job for amateurs! An occupational therapist is the right professional to advise you on how to do this safely, if it's possible in your mother's home environment. But where there's a will, there's a way :) - I hope your mother gets to enjoy her tub once more.
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