I was going to suggest one of the shower chairs that extends over the side of the tub, out into the bathroom. Your mother can sit down on it, scoot over, move one leg at a time with your assistance if necessary, then sit entirely while she's taking a shower.
However, I'm confused as to a "lung hose connection". Do you mean she's on oxygen.
Also, does she have a special narrow tub? Tubs are standards unless they custom made for rich folks or are adaptive tubs for people with mobility issues. Can you describe this narrow tub a bit more? Is it a standard size bathtub or something else?
It is an old claw type bath tub, sides are very high and deep and narrow. Also that was a typo : (long hose connection) was what it should have been. Thank you very much for the quick response to my question! The support is much appreciated!
I did find that some of the bath chairs have legs that can be raised. However, I don't know how high that would make them or whether they would be high enough to allow someone to sit down and easily slide over the chari into a clawfoot tub.
What I would do is take measurements of the tub's height, from the floor to the rim, then either check online or call local DME suppliers to get heights of the chairs. In our area hospitals usually have their own DME division.
If you can't find any that are high enough, and are handy with a saw and screwdriver, you could make steps to get up to the bath chair that extends over the side of a tub. They've have to be very broad though, and best with low risers so that height from one step would be very much I think there should also be some way to anchor them, or clamp them to something, so there's no slippage.
There might even be that kind of slips; DME suppliers might have some. Or a company that specializes in assistive devices and retrofitting might be able to make some steps.
My father made some baby steps for my mother. The risers were only about 2.5 to 3", so she could easily climb on them. However, if they were ever redone, I'd make them much wider.
However, I'm confused as to a "lung hose connection". Do you mean she's on oxygen.
Also, does she have a special narrow tub? Tubs are standards unless they custom made for rich folks or are adaptive tubs for people with mobility issues. Can you describe this narrow tub a bit more? Is it a standard size bathtub or something else?
What I would do is take measurements of the tub's height, from the floor to the rim, then either check online or call local DME suppliers to get heights of the chairs. In our area hospitals usually have their own DME division.
If you can't find any that are high enough, and are handy with a saw and screwdriver, you could make steps to get up to the bath chair that extends over the side of a tub. They've have to be very broad though, and best with low risers so that height from one step would be very much I think there should also be some way to anchor them, or clamp them to something, so there's no slippage.
There might even be that kind of slips; DME suppliers might have some. Or a company that specializes in assistive devices and retrofitting might be able to make some steps.
My father made some baby steps for my mother. The risers were only about 2.5 to 3", so she could easily climb on them. However, if they were ever redone, I'd make them much wider.
Someone asked a similar question about bathing and I answered here:
https://www.agingcare.com/questions/caregiving-the-copd-patient-187664.htm?cpage=0&cm=533124#533124