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Mom is 94, on hospice due to CHF, in memory care, is visually impaired and has hearing loss. She hasn't used a regular bed for years. She is walking constantly with her walker (a symptom of anxiety which is not presently being treated). She does have delusions. I am concerned about her ability to operate a recliner lift chair and her attachment to present recliner (worn out). I want her to have a new chair now as opposed to waiting till she absolutely can't get out of her recliner. Have a sibling who wants to wait. Advice?

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The lift recliner chairs have a hand control that operates the positions.

She may have issues learning the controls and remembering them.
Husband's aunt, 92, has one and occasionally gets confused and once almost slid on the floor. Thankfully she has sitters all day to supervise.
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At an assisted living facility that my friend's father was in they were not allowed. They felt they contributed to loss of leg strength and to falls. Some of them practically dump you out of the chair. If her current one still works I'd leave things alone.
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All I know about lift recliners is that my mom's caregiver had lots of stories about clients that had basically been dumped on the floor because of them, I think it takes a fair amount of physical and mental coordination to use them safely.
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Have the current recliner recovered. OR,
Buy one identical to it and set it beside the old one.
Spend her money now, what is sibling waiting F O R , I wonder.....

Your post has brought up memories, when all the family heard was:
"Don't spend my inheritance".

Have the anxiety treated.
While on hospice, have a medication review, trying to remove all nonessential medications, and/or decrease the dosages.

You don't wait.
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glisse1121 Nov 2021
PS - We tried to get her anxiety meds before but were not successful. At this point it would seem that starting them at her age might not be the best course of action.
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I would have an insert made for the seat. It takes weeks to get a chair recushioned and reupholstered.

I would buy some memory foam and use water proof cover, then make covers like pillowcases, make a couple sets.

That way she gets to keep her beloved chair and you know it is giving her support and comfort.
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glisse1121 Nov 2021
When she was taking care of dad, she started staying in the recliner every night which is how this started. We tried getting a bed which she wouldn't use at all. The chair is 60 years old and is just plain worn out. And she is small, frail and stubborn. Chair is quite small.

The suggestion of making an insert might work and help keep peace between siblings. I'm not sure if putting this on a worn out chair would be the best course of action. I will try this out for now and see if this will help. Hospice personnel recommended a lift recliner.
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I wanted money on two of these things for mom and dad. At first it was like a fun thing but due to dementia they both soon forgot how to make them work. They’d get stuck up or down. I finally set them at a comfortable spot and unplugged them. They’re about $800 or more.

It’s like the rolling walkers with brakes, walk in baths that celebrities sell on tv, it takes a fair amount of cognition to make this stuff work.
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I don't think there's any way she can learn a new controller unless it's exactly like her old one. Is it possible to find a newer used version of her existing one? Call the company that makes it? Just a thought.
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MIL’s doctor wrote us a script for one of these which I do not understand because she is in. MC facility and will not remember how to use it. Blows my mind
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These chairs are great for a certain age and stage. My mom used one for years and it was great. She did not have dementia. My DH aunt with dementia has one and she slid to the floor when she decided out of the blue to adjust it.
I like Windy’s idea to adjust and unplug. Then when you wanted them to get up, you could plug back up and be there to help them. Aunts was expensive and a waste since she wants to stay in bed. But occasionally she sits in it and it’s easier for caregivers to get her up with the lift.
We had to get rid of aunts old recliner which she loved. Red leather her favorite. But had begun to smell. We removed the old one after we got the new chair which we placed by her bed. She never mentioned the old one. Out of sight, out of mind.
Almost forgot. The chairs that have two motors are more useful. One motor for the recline, the head. One for the foot rest. This way you can sit in the chair upright and lift the feet while watching tv or eating or visiting. With the one motor the head reclines and the feet go up at the same time. No choice. The two motor ones are usually more expensive but I have seen them for less. The vinyl is better for cleaning but easier to slip out of. There are washable pads available online for recliners.
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My hubby had a lift chair. It for to the point where he couldn't figure out which was up and which was down. I even wrote Stand by the Up button and Sit by the Down button and it did no good. He now has one that he just has to lean back in and that is a problem. I hate this disease.
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My wife has dementia. 2yrs ago I bought her an expensive recliner, one that had separate buttons for leaning back, raising legs, stop in any position with battery backup. She could not operate it. I did all of the button pushing. She would just crawl out of it when reclined when I wasn't in the room. It wasn't too long before she became bed bound.
I suggest renting a recliner to see if she could adjust to any new and unfamiliar controls.
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