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My mother, who is 86 and lives with us, has had her mobility dramatically decrease over the past 3-4 months. It got so bad at the end of October that she became homebound in her bedroom on the second floor with us down the hall in another bedroom, as I cannot get her to walk short distances. We have been "handling" things as well as we can, and started to develop a "routine" to deal with her limitations, as she could get out of bed and into a wheelchair, and she could stand up briefly in the bathroom. But things are getting worse. She is having more trouble getting out of bed and into the chair, and have trouble sitting up in toilet, even when gripping the sink and with a lot of lifting help. I am starting to get troubled at this point that maybe we are getting over our head in terms of care, and I am concerned I or my wife are going to hurt our backs, which is has been happening to me. When my mother gets confused, she decides to sit on the floor, and that makes it impossible to get her up. I am thinking of getting a Hoyer Lift, but I don't know if a person with such advanced Alzheimer's will handle this. I also was looking at a "Stand Assist Power Lift," which seemed more practical, but wouldn't be of any help when she decides to sit on the floor. (I am also not sure if I can get a Hoyer Lift into the house.) Any of you caring for advanced Alzheimer's Disease patients at home, how are you handling this? It is totally a different issue when they can't walk anymore. Please only looking from responses from those caregivers dealing with this type of issue. Thanks.

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My mom has been on the brink of being totally bed bound a couple of times so I've done a little research into lifts and alternatives.
A portable hoyer lift is really only portable in a facility because they can not manoeuvre over carpet or through the doors and halls in a typical home or even begin to fit in a bathroom. When it comes to lifts a permanent track lift may be a better option, but it would not be cheap and using one would come with a whole new set of problem. Our occupational therapist said that often families opt to lift manually even after installing lifts because they are such a p-i-t-a.

So what are your alternatives?

Work on increasing your own strength through exercise, and get some training in transfer techniques.

Accepting total incontinence and opting to change her while lying down in bed. (youtube has good training videos of this)

Getting some physical therapy so she can regain the ability to help with transfers, but even then you have to understand that you are merely delaying the inevitable, the time will come - may have already come - when she simply can't do it any more.

Look into low tech devices like transfer boards, tuning disks etc. An occupational therapist can go through your home and give you specific options that may help.

Accept that you have reached you limits and look into finding her placement in a nursing home.
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I couldn't have managed my mother at home without the lift - she was post-stroke and paralysed down one side. She also had vascular dementia; but it sounds as though your mother's advanced Alzheimers means that you're concerned your mother might be frightened by the lift, to the point of fighting you, which of course could get very risky?

If you have a friendly PT or occupational therapist, see if you can get some training and trial sessions in using the lift. Be the "patient" so that you get the hang of how it feels when the sling is positioned correctly.

None of it is actually difficult or hard to understand, assuming you have basic spatial and mechanical aptitude, but you do have to be seriously obsessional about the method: you can't afford a single mistake, and you can't afford to hurry - better to clean up an accident than risk missing a strap fastening. Plus, the more confident and capable you are about fitting the sling to your mother and operating the hoist, the less panicked she is likely to be.

If you and your wife are concerned about damaging your backs (and you are right to be cautious, and it will help nobody if either of you slips a disc), you must stop lifting your mother - it's that simple. Get a caregiver in, get an OT in to teach you better techniques, but do *something*. If God forbid one of you is injured in mid-lift you could seriously hurt not only yourself but your mother too.
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My husband who has FTD (frontal temporal dementia) age 61, is unsteady on his feet but is able to walk yet with help. I have a TRANSFER BELT that he must wear when going up and down stairs, and at times walking. Got it from AMAZON. It has loops that you can grab and hold on to him with. He was ill in Dec and unable to hardly stand for a couple wks so I had a rollaway bed for him to sleep on, on the first floor of our home. The transfer belt is work its wt in GOLD! When the time comes I will get a bedside commode and he will have to stay on the first floor, no more stairs. I have a walker that he holds on to, to sit on the toilet. I have been thinking of a bedside commode that has arms and can be put over the toilet (while he still walks), then when he can not, just transfer from bed to commode. I have a caregiver for him the hrs while I work. If walking is too dangerous, he will have to be bedridden and turned every 2 hrs or so to prevent bed sores. He has fallen and I use the transfer belt to get him up. I have put a chair near him and try to lift up so to sit on it enough then he gets the idea to stand. If I can not get him up my neighbors will help me get him up. I do not know about the power lift. Watch out not to hurt your back. I wear a abdominal binder/back brace when moving him. My husband weighs about 130 lb but is "dead weight". If she is so unsteady maybe she needs to be bed bound? Having a bedside commode or chair right by the bed to transfer on to if she can bear weight and transfer works. There is a transport wheel chair also that has 4 sm wheels not the 2 big ones on the back. With my husband I want him walking and moving around, sitting in the chair, etc to keep his strength up until this is not possible. I plan on keeping him at home with hospice in the future, no nursing home if possible. I am a RN so all that training helps for sure. Any physical therapist out there to suggest ways to get a patient up of the floor when fallen? God be with you, this is the hardest thing I have ever done.
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I am a physical therapist. I would recommend that you get a referral for home P.T. They can evaluate your situation, recommend assistive equipment, and instruct you to assist with transfers.
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k3kerr and cwillie - thanks for listening and your responses. I will try k3kerr's sheet "sling" concept tonight, it may help us, because grip belts really do nothing in that situation. I can get her to sit up in bed, which is positive. Our problem is her overall weakness and confusion in trying to stand.

I really have three primary challenges (today): 1. consistently transferring her from bed to commode chair, 2. getting her off floor if she decides to sit down on the floor in bedroom, 3. getting her off floor if she decides to sit down on floor, when she stands to get her pants off in bathroom. Thankfully the bathroom is small enough (an ironic "benefit") that last item is infrequent. I am thinking maybe if we move to "side zip" pants, that will be less of a struggle due to her mobility challenges. I am still thinking of getting a Hoyer Lift for the bedroom only, as a contingency for the bedroom transfers. I have plastic "office chair" style floor coverings in the bedroom area (to allow ready clean up),  so the bedroom area is more "flat" and smooth than otherwise.

I would really like to know if there is any caregiver who has used Hoyer Lifts with Advanced Alzheimer's patients, and if they are able to handle that without panic.
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FOUND THIS ON INTERNET:
The more trainings I take about caring for people with dementia and the more I really try to see the world from their eyes, I see how scary and unsettling life is for them. A very simple example of this is the Hoyer lift we now have for Mom.

A Hoyer lift is a large device with a sling attached to it that lifts a person who can not walk and allows you to transfer them. We had a few new caregivers at the house to help train them on how to use the Hoyer lift because it is very easy to get bruised or dropped in the lift if it is not used correctly. Dad and I let the caregivers practice transferring us in the lift. Let me tell you, it is pretty scary.

You sit there while the people around you communicate with each other checking to make sure they have the right colored loop on the right hook so you do not fall out of the lift. They were just about to lift me once when I noticed one side of the lift was not attached and I was able to tell them before they lifted me. I was imagining what it was like to be Mom and maybe see that the lift was not correct, but not be able to speak to tell them. How scary!


Then they lift you up and you are suspended and swinging in mid-air while the device rolls across the floor taking you to your new destination. Someone has to watch your forehead so it does not collide with the metal bar at the top of the lift and another person holds your legs so they do not swing and hit the metal pole that is the center of the lift. You would think you might feel like you are wrapped in a cocoon but you really feel like you are swinging from a crane like a fish caught in a net that could drop at any time.

I can see how this is terrifying for persons with dementia. No wonder many of them get agitated during transfers.

Here are a few tips that might make something like this easier:

1. Always tell the person exactly what you are doing at every moment. "Carol, we are going to move you from your chair to the bed. We are getting the lift ready. Now we are going to raise you up."

3. Each caregiver should check to make sure the other got all of the loops on the right hooks as a safety measure. Say out loud that everything has been checked so the person can hear you and feel a bit more safe.

2. Reassure safety: "Carol, we are going to raise you up. The lift is safe and we are here for you."

No matter what, much of life is going to be scary for persons with dementia. Even if you think they cannot hear you or understand, they probably can, so the best thing to do is communicate a lot with them. Always tell them what is going on around them and what is happening next. And in every situation try to see it from their perspective in order to understand their needs better.
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A "Sit to Stand" would be a first step before a Hoyer.
A Sit to Stand works well, I used on with my Husband for about 2 years. As long as he could hold on and support his weight it was great.
You place a belt around the persons waist then hook the straps to the Sit to Stand. You then either pump a lever to raise the bars or push a button to electrically lift the supporting bars.
The persons feet are on a platform and the knees are up against a support. Once they are upright you can wheel them to bed, another chair or I used this as a way to change my husband. I would raise him up pull down his pants then strip off the soiled brief (tab type) then put on another and pull up the pants. Worked great until he was unable to support his weight and keep weight on his feet.

And a side note. When my husband would begin to slip off the edge of the bed or slide down in his chair I would help him safely to the floor or support him with pillows and cushions then I would call 911. They are trained to lift someone safely. As long as there is no transport there was no bill.
Do not be afraid to call them, do not be embarrassed to call them. This is what they are trained to do, this is their job.
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jeffrey20832
How would you get your mother downstairs if a problem arises and she is homebound on the second floor?
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If you type "hoyer lift" in the site search bar you will find several threads mentioning them, maybe you will find what you are looking for there.
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I hope you'll get some more responses. Apparently, Hoyer lifts in the home aren't that popular. I found this old thread from a person who said it was not working for her mom. I'd ask the doctor about whether fractures are a risk from the pressure that is applied to the body during the lifts.

https://www.agingcare.com/questions/mom-experiences-pain-uses-the-hoyer-lift-175831.htm

'I'd also be afraid that she would be frightened from the lift. I think that I would even be intimidated by it. And, I'd be prepared that it might not work. I don't know the price, but, I suppose you could resell it, if it didn't work out.
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