Mum with dementia has incontinence and also rather frequent UTI’s that stink. She had these problems to an extent pre-dementia but obviously her dementia has made things worse as her up keep is not as good.
She lives with me in a rental and I’m getting rather sick of the urine smell!
We try change her depends often but obviously I don’t quite have the timing right! As in, I’ll notice it’s all dry when changing and within 15 min she may have wet the new one and then it’s leaking from the sides or something while she sits etc.
I got rid of all the rugs in her bathroom as it was just too frequent that I’d be washing them. Her bladder would start going before she’d manage to be seated fully on the toilet which meant the toilet mat was getting wet constantly. With her shower mat, there might be dribble as she was entering the shower but she also was in the habit of undressing her dirty depend on the mat rather than placing in bin. So I got rid of these and I placed puppy pee pads in her bathroom instead. At least with these I can just throw them out and replace. It’s actually surprising how warm they feel under feet compared to tile!
In fact I have puppy pee pads all over the place! :( it’s not exactly a nice look but saves my sanity a little. I have them on the arm chairs for instance. I also have them on the most common areas of the floor where mostly urine has been a problem. Ie next to her bed (when she gets up, she has at times decided to change her depend herself and drop on the floor or she may have been in a rush to bathroom and be dribbling). I also have one coming out of the bathroom to catch her feet that may be wet from urine.
Before anyone thinks that I’m not doing enough or I’m lazy,... if I’m there, I ensure it doesn’t happen ie wipe her feet with baby wipes / clean the toilet floor / help her change depend etc. However I’m not there always as I could be asleep for instance when she gets up or simply be doing another duty like laundry.
Anyhow,.. despite the puppy pee pads, changing depends frequently,.. what do others do to keep the place smelling nice? Most of the House is carpet so the smell really sinks in! I have a carpet cleaning machine (Bissel pro-heat) but I don’t want to use this constantly as the carpets take ages to dry, not to mention it’s huge work.
How do they deal with this in nursing/aged care homes? I’ve noticed most of the bedrooms are carpet!
Also Mum has been on a public wait list for surgery relating to her incontinence pre-dementia. They have finally made contact to further this! What do I do?!? Is there point now that she has dementia? Would they still do something? She can’t write anymore or answer some question so I’m not sure she’d be eligible for surgery and I don’t have POA. I know she’d want it (she still talks about it as she knows she’s on a wait list) but will it actually help anything now? How do I tell her she might no longer be eligible for something she has waited ages for. Before anyone says get a POA,.. I’ve addressed that in another post.. I can’t get her evaluated. I’ve been trying for ages. No doctor wants to evaluate her capacity and Mum refuses to go back to the Dementia clinic who initially just gave us the forms.
But how do I keep my house clean of urine smell? Any tips and recommendations welcome!
As for the carpets. Invest in a rug shampooer. They are as easy to use as a vacuum cleaner. I recommend the Hoover double-brush roller model. In between shampooing use Arm & Hammer litter box deodorizer powder. Sprinkle some on the carpet when you vacuum. It smells really nice and your house will always be smelling fresh. If there's urine on the furniture upholstery or in the padding of wall-to-wall carpeting there is a spray product called Pooph. A member of this forum recommended it to me. I have never seen a product that worked like this. I was an in-home caregiver for 25 years and I've cleaned up every kind of revolting incontinence and filth. Pooph gets rid of the urine and even crap smell from furniture and rugs. They even have a Pooph for laundry. I'm telling you, this gets the smell out like nothing else and believe me I have tried everything else.
The most recent use was on an oxford cloth, white, button down cotton shirt that had a cluster of tiny red wine stains on it. The shirt had been sitting about four days before I tried Zout, I had my doubts about it working on what was a perfect storm of red wine and soft cotton staining....Zout got it out.
It's not perfect on poopy stains, but there is at least a 75% improvement of the treated areas. Urine hasn't been an issue-yet, will see how that goes.
Carpet needs to be saturated, because what might appear to be a dribble on top, could very well be plate size in the pad.
Don't clean with boiling water, it can set odors and break down cleaners. Use hot water or warm.
My friend had her dad and the carpet was messed all over, she cleaned it with arm and hammer with oxy-clean laundry detergent. No more smell. She tells everyone how awesome it worked, because it was bad.
Hospitals in my city clean with odor-ban, it has a eucalyptus smell and sanitizes. It needs to be diluted or the smell will get you.
I use essential oil diffusers to add a nice fragrance in my home. Lemon, orange, lime with May Chang EOs smell clean, it also has some antibacterial properties to cleanse the air. It won't cover up or hide odors though. Just freshen the air.
Best of luck, this is tough to live with.
Mom and UTIs. Mom was put on cranberry tablets and a probiotic to stem the UTI. She never had another UTI from then till a year later when she passed. Alva, a nurse, swears by D-Mannose.
When urine incontinence or other smells as generated by my husband with Frontal Temporal dementia, become a problem here, and they will, will start with large bowls of vinegar to help with the stench.
My dad now has been supplied with pads that absorb a lot of pee & held in place by elasticated pants. They really do the trick. These are supplied by the NHS in UK but as dad has fecal incontinence then I've ordered these pads on line.
What I advise is that you talk to a Dr & a continence nurse to see if you can get the pads free. Also you need to talk to a social worker for adult care to see if you can get help extra help to have respite & carers to help to you look after mum. While someone looks after mum you can get a rest or go out & go out for a few hours, or catch up with the chores.
You really need help from the Dr & nurses to work out the best incontinence pads. Or whether she needs to have a catheter but that can cause UTIs .
The pads & pants are as follows: Abena
Abri San premium.
Size 10 holds most liquid & can be used at nights. They have an indicator when they need changing. Number 8s can be used in the day. You get 21 pads in a pack. The. To hold them in place you need Abena abri fix pants. They come in medium /large /X large. The tighter they are the more better for pad to be snug.
Hope this helps .
Vinegar and Baking soda works wonders for clothing too, any type of sour smell.
The bathroom Mango & Hibiscus Lysol. Air out the dwelling everyday and keep up with the bathroom and bedding. I do my bathroom 2x daily, everyone remarks how clean things are. Rubber gloves of course.
Before the mats from the hospital store were delivered, I used trash bags over the mattress and below the bedding sheets.
You can make do until the right stuff comes in. The main thing is to keep up with everything. I know it's a grind but these things really do work.
Hope this helps...
We use baking soda fridge packs alongside the closet deodorizers.
But our go-to is to spray things with vinegar/water combo (or unscented Fabreeze which is a baking soda/alcohol combo) and then place a portable dehumidifier unit into the room. Four hours later, the spot is dry and also smell-free.
While a dehumidifier unit is more expensive, it has saved so much on having to buy chemicals or our time cleaning (you know the saying time is money) that it is one of the best investments we've made in this process. It can be rolled from room to room and also set on a 2 or 4-hour timer so it shuts itself off.
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