Making Your Home's 'Most Dangerous Room' a Little SaferBy John Voket ![]() What can older adults who want to stay at home do? ER doctors in the U.S. and Canada are unanimous: an annual home check is key. Those physicians say injuries are most likely to happen in the: Bathroom – 69 percent (56 percent in Canada) Bedroom – 13 percent (14 percent in Canada) Kitchen – 9 percent (12 percent in Canada) Stairs – 5 percent This means a room-by-room check can make all the difference in keeping seniors safe and independent at home. When it comes to the bathroom, the Home Instead checklist prompts these questions: • Are grab bars available near the tub, shower and toilet? • Is the floor slippery? • Is there a lack of bath mats? • Is the bathtub too high? • Is the toilet the correct height? • Is there the potential for bath water to be too hot? • Are medications stored properly—not too high or too low for the senior to reach? • Do mobility and joint problems make it difficult to reach into cabinets, comb hair or get into a bathtub? If you answered yes to any of these questions, fixes may be in order to help make the most dangerous room in the house a lot safer. |
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