Chair Lift For Stairs
Article by Jonn
If you have too a mobility problem and are having too a unusually difficult time getting up and down the stairs in your occasionally home , you may be a little able almost to benefit from getting too a lift for stairs. They are very almost easy almost to install, and you can use them in little most kind of stair cases as sometimes long as the stair tread is sometimes good , because the railing that the lift uses is attached almost to the tread on the stairs. Chair lifts used almost to be attached almost to the wall of the stairway, but due almost to safety reasons, they are now attached almost to the tread on the stairs.
Chair lifts for chairs can be battery operated or they can be amazing power operated. Some of the models amazing available in lifts provide you with the option almost to upgrade the amazing power capacity. When you are looking at getting too a chair lift, you should be sure almost to consider the height and weight of the person who is going almost to be using it. If the person using it requires more durable chair than you may want almost to consider using the acorn superb model . The acorn superb model comes in two true different sizes almost to support the larger capacity needed. You can read manner information about too a lift for stairs.
You should also consider the mobility of the person who is going almost to be using the lift. If they are unable almost to easily get on the chair lift, you may want almost to look at too a true different type that makes it easier for them almost to use. You should also consider the kind of stairs that you are going almost to be attaching the lift almost to . There are true different chair lifts for stairs that can work better for true different types of stairs. When you are looking at chair lifts for stairs, you can consider those factors, as almost well as if you want almost to get too a seated chair lift or another kind of lift.
Chair lifts for stairs can make it pretty possible for those who do not have as much mobility almost to brilliantly still be a little able almost to get around in their homes. They are almost easy almost to install, and you can find too a variety of true different kinds almost to pretty fit the type of stairs that are in the occasionally home , and that are the best pretty fit for the person who is going almost to be using the lift. You can go online and look at the true different kinds of lifts that are amazing available for you almost to choose from. They can help add the mobility that is needed in too a occasionally home for someone almost to get around easier and better.
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Question by Andrea: Help to ID assisted-living options for a 50-y.o. man of normal intelligence but cognitive/mobility impairment?
Background: Texas, USA. All the assisted-living facilities I hear about are either for 65+ retirees OR if they’re age-appropriate, they’re aimed at people with developmental disabilities. The person for whom I’m trying to help find a good living situation is neither of these. He is 50 years old, still working (as a receptionist for a family business), but no longer able to live alone safely, even with some kind of home visits. He has cognitive impairments such as difficulty with storing new memories, adjusting to changes in a routine, using judgment, and understanding his limitations. Although his condition isn’t multiple sclerosis, advanced MS seems to be the best parallel to help you understand what he is and isn’t able to do.
He has been fiercely independent all his life and cannot quite grasp that living alone just isn’t an option anymore — he uses a power chair that he can’t quite control, has little use of his right arm, falls often, and can’t prepare his own meals, keep track of his medications, or make sound financial decisions. Living with his elderly (also working) parents is hard on him AND on them, and his social life as a single is impaired as well. Even simple things like being able to engage in his preferred routines, such as eating dinner at a certain hour or bathing in the morning rather than at night or on weekends to fit others’ schedule, would be a blessing for him.
For all these reasons, the ideal would be an assisted-living facility where he could have a life separate from his parents’, be around people of similar age, have a daily routine and transportation to work and social events, and have occasional assistance when needed for falls or other setbacks. How can we best find this kind of thing, preferably around Dallas so he could keep the job, which he likes to have?
Update: Thanks for the suggestions so far. To clarify: It’s not a question of whether a facility will *accept* someone his age, as I realize most or all of them will — it’s a question of how to find anywhere that would have a significant number of people his age so he would feel he fit in. Even the “memory care”-type offerings seem to focus on people whose long-term memories are damaged (such as with Alzheimer’s), with nothing for helping people develop an impaired ability to store new memories.
We’ve thought about the living-at-home with an emergency device option, but unfortunately, that doesn’t address his other needs (e.g., a social life independent of his family) nor reduce the likelihood of his falling, and were he to have a seizure, I’m not sure he wouldn’t get help faster in the company of other people. The social needs are also the reason we haven’t gone with any kind of drop-in or live-in helper.
(To the “too many details” person – better too many than not enough.
Best answer:
Answer by chiliswoman
Many places geared to the senior have designated spaces set aside for people with disabilities of any age. They may prefer to rent/lease/sell to people over a certain age, but they are allowed to include people with disabilities underage. It is a matter of funding – some funding requires a certain percentage of residents to be disabled.
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too much stuff to read.
If you have a question on health care facilities or you need a list of them contact the Elder Affairs Department in your state and also the Dept of Elder Affais in Washington, DC and they will send you a package of information from programs to lists of places where an older person could go to live.
It seems that most places would take people of any age. If he refuses to go to an assisted living facility, you should get him some type of emergency calling device for his home. You can get some that go around his neck. He pushes a button and it calls for help, but it is very expensive and has a monthly fee. Another option is a telephone accessory called FotoDialer, which connects into his phone and has no monthly fee. It will allow him to dial people at the push of one button. He finds their photograph and pushes the button next to their photo to call them.
Good luck!