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I kind of expected that this would happen. I had told my mother to use a walker for months, but she insisted on just using her cane, Unfortunately, yesterday she slipped as she tried to get into a chair and broke her femur. Now she is in pain, depressed, and looking at weeks of therapy.

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Jeanne reminded me of my own aunt who broke her leg in her 80s. I remember going to the rehab to visit her. Her leg was up in traction. She was there all alone. No children to help her.
She had colon cancer at the time which she eventually died from but she made a full recovery with the leg. I can't remember which bone. She was amazing with a great attitude.
After your mom is all better and back at home try to get her to keep up her exercises and at least once a year ask her dr to order her home pt to keep her strong. Usually you just have to say she needs a little help with her balance which is always true. My aunt gets it once a quarter and I know it helps her.
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Pretty much what you said happens. She will need therapy and it will include a walker. Not to say she won't go back to the cane. If she works hard she might actually be stronger than she was before. I hope she doesn't have osteoporosis.
Now she will be focused on regaining her strength. Hopefully her attitude will pick up when she sees that she can and will make progress if she stays focused on her goals.
Encourage her to take full advantage of rehab.
I hope she feels better soon.
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Two of my aunts broke a bone in their late 80s. They went through some therapy and got on with their lives. These breaks were both in the arms and I imagine the leg bones would require a lot more PT. But it seems it is possible for old bones to heal. As 97 says, if she is conscientious with the PT she could wind up stronger!

Getting into or out of a chair (or toilet or bed) seems to be a risk action, whether with cane, walker, or no device. I hope the PT will teach good techniques with whatever device mother will use.
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My 94 yr old mother has finished recuperation and rehab from a fractured pelvis that happened in early March. It was very painful for her and it was a little hard to keep her spirits up at first since she assumed she would never be able to regain her former capabilities. She is now fully functional and we feel like she is better prepared for maintaining her independence that before. For us the key was having her primary care doctor prescribe home health care and therapy. Just having the nurses and therapist visit her in her home and tell her that there is no reason why she couldn't return to normal gave her the motivation to do what she needed to do. There were definitely some silver linings from the event. We have become experts in setting her home up to help prevent future falls - in particular, in the bathroom. With guidance from the OT we have made sure that kitchen items are placed better for her access. The PT has resulted in more upper body strength that she had previously - this will help her for the rest of her life. They taught her how to get up from chairs safely and a hundred other practical tips.

RayLinStevens - I laughed when I read your note about the height of the walker. After my mother fell we pulled my fathers old walker out of the closet and put a tray on it so that she could carry items with her when she used it. The first thing the PT did was to lower the walker as much as possible and to take the tray off so that her arms weren't hunched up right below her shoulder while she was walking behind the tray! My DH and I just looked at each other and exchanged a look that said "How could we have been so stupid not to have seen that???". That was our wakeup call that we couldn't rely on our intuition and knowledge - we needed to educate ourselves on the whole subject.
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These are very encouraging posts! First, she'll get that sense of practice and accomplishment, and better methods to use. Second, she'll get really focused attention from several people and that may be really good for her spirits. My mom lights up when certain people fuss over her at dr's offices and I'm reminded that she lives these days with so much less human interaction. Stay bright, brdlvr, this may work out nicely for her and you. And I'm sorry she had to go through that.
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Thank You 97yroldmom - I need to get the in-house PT for my DH again. Balance - what a lovely word. We also need help getting up from the sofa and backing up.

RE: the original question: Here in Mississippi, we have sort of "half-way" houses for the elderly to recuperate. I can't think what they're called, but it's sort of a short-term nursing home.

I have been blessed that both my Dad and now my DH have not fought the idea of a walker. I remember having to tell my Dad that his independence depended on him being mobile - not falling - this meant graduating to a walker.

For my DH, I also increased the height of the walker as he is not "stooped" and I wanted to keep it that way. Too many walkers are kept too low and the person using them winds up in a bent-over position all the time. I had the blessings of the Physical Therapist and he admitted that too often they are kept 'shorter' than necessary.
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Absolutely find the proper way to help Mom walk with the walker!! My mother went from using a cane to needing a walker 24/7 after hip replacement. She healed well enough, but her "balance" never came back as she simply refused to do the PT exercises--so the walker is now the way she goes. Or her wheelchair if she wants the attention. She walks completely curved over into a C-shape and I know it's very painful, but after her PT at home was over, I asked the PT if she could stand up straight and he said "She absolutely can. But she won't. I've dealt with your mom. She won't comply, don't expect her to." Well, he was right and nothing anyone could say to get her to walk with the walker so she wasn't "chasing it" instead of using it for balance. She does try to impress us by trying to walk w/o it, but it's a sad sight. She's now a towering 4'7" tall--from the "highest point" lost 5" just due to neglecting to do a few exercises a day.
Oh--and we WERE educated. Mother does what she wants. Period.
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MidKid58, you've just described my 97 yr old mother. On a daily basis, several times a day, I tell mom to get close to her walker. She takes a few steps, then back to "Chasing it" as you put it. That's funny. Mom does what she wants to do.
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#1 Hospital stay
#2 With morphine
#3 Then rehab unit of SNH
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Watch out for elders NOT telling you that they've fallen. My own late mother, insisting on living alone in her own home 400 miles away from me, fell twice! I find out "on the sly" 10 months later! Her child-like response="I don't have to tell you everything." I said "no, mother, I don't need to know when you have a hangnail, but I DEFINITELY NEED TO KNOW WHEN YOU'VE FALLEN!"
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