What are the best and most comfortable ladies protective underwear products any one has found to be helpful? They’re much improved from the past but want to make a good choice when I try to introduce her to using them. 85, mild dementia and always in denial!
Also, make sure the floor on the way to the bathroom is easy to clean. Someone mentioned putting down a gray tarp for his wife - think outside the box. At some stage, you might consider getting a bedside commode to keep in her room. And, peapod or other absorbent pads for the bed/chairs. Depending on how often the leaks happen and how comfortable you are doing laundry, you can get fabric or disposable ones.
I bought her some of those panties with the permanent pad sewn in that are washable, but the padding apparently was not thick enough and a big mess resulted. I also now put a bed pad that is quilted on one side and a waterproof material on the other side under her fitted sheet.
Recently I have been making sure she gets up from her recliner every two hours or so to go to the bathroom. That way she walks and moves around and also uses the restroom. Win/win!
I would strongly suggest you never call them "diapers", even pull-ups may or may not sit well with her, I always refer to them as "your underwear" or just Depends but my mom has been using them a long time, I would find a way to refer to them in a way that deciphers them from what she's wearing perhaps but sounds "normal" so panties or underwear maybe even protection might all be options. It might be a matter of both getting her to warm up to options as well as realize just how much of a pain this problem is becoming. I'm reminded of how my mom prepped me for my first period, lol, she gave me all the various options and supplies (at the time there weren't a ton, one of those belts that held pads or tampons I think) and told me how to use them well in advance as it turned out of the expected moment so when I woke up one morning I knew right where my stash was in my closet. Maybe you do something similar with mom, give her some samples and options she can try when she decides it's time. Then on the other end find a way to make sure it isn't just easy for her to not do something about it by taking away the laundry and putting clean sheets on the bed immediately or while she's not in the room, leave it long enough for her to need to ask you to do it or casually mention how nice it would be if she would try one of the standard remedies so you didn't have to do this every day. Maybe you could appeal to her pocketbook by comparing the energy and products used as well as the wear and tear on clothing and bedding to using disposable underwear. I also make it as discrete and easy as possible for mom, she has one of those small metal garbage cans with a top you step on to open lined with the small lemon scent garbage bags from Walmart (cheap like .98 cents for a roll) so she can just ties the bag up every couple days for the trash can and take one from the bottom to put over the can insert herself. It keeps the smell at bay (which she seems to be loosing unfortunately) and she feels like she is covering up the whole situation from everyone else, taking care of it herself. She has also had various bed pads but the best set up we have now found is I got 3 "water proof" sheets and 3 extra large pads which have a little gully around the outside and non-slip nodules on the back side, nice cotton on the front side. I have a full "waterproof" mattress cover around the mattress, a sheet a pad on top of that, then another waterproof sheet, sheet, pad and a third set all on the bed so when she has an accident all she has to do is peel off the top sheet/pad layer and she has a clean dry fresh one underneath, no need to make the bed again.
Also got Akord adult diaper pail from Amazon which really makes the process odorless - but you have the ongoing expense of the bags. I got tired and kinda grossed out by putting each pull-up in old grocery bags and throwing them on the garbage.
Also do not not forget under pads for furniture. Disposable is easy but there are good quality washable products.
Although they may be cheaper elsewhere, I order them through WM (do not have Prime, and will not, so they always delay my orders.) The Maximum, Large, 56 Count were about $38/box (averages to about $0.68 each) and they ship quickly without signing up for an expensive program like Prime!
for long term we teach her the excerise. More important all science points to sleep and gut bacteria for issues like bladder control. Lake of right sleep does not give the body to produce the anti diuretic hormone to stop urine production. Read about sleep and gut bacteria. This goes for you too. Vitamin b and D and good sleep right type of sleep not with sleeping medication will change all.
I know people worry so about the cost, but the COST of washing, cleaning, cleaning, cleaning--It's hard to put a price tag on something like this. Plus the overflow on furniture and car seats--my car STILL smells of pee and she had a minor leak a few months ago. I saturated that seat with "urine be gone' and let it sit for hours, the steam cleaned off and on for hours. Stiil, on a hot day--gotta air out the car.
I'm more upset that mother just takes her off and drops them in an very small open trash can along with the poise pads and then lets them ferment until SATURDAY b/c that's the day my niece 'cleans' for her. The smell in an overheated apartment is unbelievable. I know the make adult sized "diaper genies' but these also need to go out 3-4 times a week and she wouldn't use one.
I'm of board for ANY care for the next 4 months. Doing chemo and her place is off limits due to feral birds living there--also my doc felt it simply wasn't healthy to be around the filth. YEAH. Not for the cancer, but for the break!!
I have one of those travel bags, too - with pants, wipes and gloves, along with her little wallet with her ID and Medicare card, as well as the legal paperwork. It's in a handy place where I can grab it at a moment's notice.
At naptime and nighttime I put a Tena extra-large incontinence pad inside the pants, and that works great! I've also lined her bed with one of the Prevail pads to cut down on laundry if she pees more than usual.
I got terrycloth leakproof sheets for her bed, too, from Amazon. They're wonderful! Very soft and comfortable, and they haven't leaked yet after two years of use.
Ma spends most of her time at her little desk, reading her audiobooks, so when she really started having bowel incontinence, I got a bedside commode and stationed it next to the desk so she can get there quickly (well, as quickly as she can, anyway). If you have to do this yourself, forget those expensive commode liners. I buy black "t-shirt" bags (like grocery bags, only black, so you can't see the contents through the plastic) and I line the bucket with two bags, but after use, I only pull out the first bag. The second one is insurance.
Good luck! By the way, we've always referred to her pull-ups as her "pants." That's what she called her cloth underwear, so I stuck with that. And when it was time to give up the cloth pants, I simply cleaned out her drawer and threw them away, making the transition a fait accompli. Sometimes you have to do that - discussion often only makes it worse.
You might suggest that she start at night, at bedtime. She should have no qualms about that.
Then use one If going out of the house. It offers a feeling of security.
She can then ‘use as needed.’ Many times I forget whether I have one on on not.
I hope she has also conferred with a doctor. There are a number of medications that may help and a number of strategies that may help.
i hope this helps