Beginning a discussion about good
bathing practices helps ensure that new technological developments provide the
necessary assistance seniors require to remain self-sufficient or regain
independence. As the largest organ in the body, the skin performs regulatory
functions including temperature maintenance, expulsion of toxins through sweat
and prevention of dehydration, and skin is part of the body’s defense system
against infection. Thus, skin maintenance becomes even more critical as we age.
The fragile state of skin in many
individuals who face bathing disabilities compounds the necessity to be sure we
are actively cleaning and taking care of the skin while also protecting and
enhancing its integrity. Removing dead skin cells and body waste from the
skin’s surface is important to our health but ironically, many of the
activities we undertake (soaps, warm water, astringents) remove protective oils
and decrease the inherent protective nature of skin.
The cost of wound management for
fragile skin becomes significant because wounds are a primary source of
allowing infection into the body, which can have a significant impact on the
quality of daily life. Ensuring bathing routines and rituals promote healthy
skin requires an individualized approach to bathing to account for the needs of
the skin as well as our social needs.
Hygiene is an issue that can be
particularly difficult to discuss with the people we are closest with. However,
hygiene issues can contribute significantly to the cost of health care,
long-term care and the ability to stay independent.
It remains unclear exactly what
causes urinary tract infections (UTI), particularly in the elderly, and a wide
variety of organisms are responsible. However, 70 percent of UTIs in
non-catheterized patients are caused by E. coli. In patients with a catheter,
E. coli is responsible for roughly 40 percent of UTI diagnoses. Attention to
hygiene can significantly reduce the impact of E. coli transfer and
colonization. Meticulous personal hygiene and appropriate incontinent care are
crucial in the elimination of re-infection UTIs. In a study of
non-catheterized, elderly, long term care residents, results showed a significant
reduction in UTI risk factors when correct hygiene protocols were followed by
caregivers.
As we age, we face more difficulty
with the activities of daily living. Bathing disability is one of those
critical activities that can take away independence. Bathing disability is
defined as the inability to wash and dry one’s whole body without personal
assistance. A number of studies and personal experiences tell us that when a
person experiences bathing disability, it is associated with long-term nursing
home admission.
The strong relationship between
bathing disability and nursing home admission exists even when there are other
disabilities impacting daily activities. When studied in adults age 70 and
older, the onset of a bathing disability increased the likelihood of developing
a disability in the other activities in the following month by five times. It’s
important to note that a bathing disability can be a transient disability. In a
2006 study, researchers found that approximately one-third of the participants
had multiple episodes of bathing disability, with the duration of each episode
averaging about six months. Bathing disability is not commonly proceeded by
other disabilities, and it strongly predicts subsequent disabilities, so the
ability to prevent the onset of bathing disability becomes critical to being
able to age in place.
Technological developments in the
bathing environment in the form of chairs, benches, mats, grab bars, hand held
showers, etc. are personal. The ADA provides us with guidelines about how to
make environments accessible, but the ADA doesn’t account for the specific
disabilities of a person and the type of assistance they need.
Technology doesn't have to mean a
device with a screen, wires or electricity. Technology is defined as the
application of scientific knowledge for practical purposes. The goal is to
understand, and apply what we understand, to the problems that need solving.
More specifically, assistive technology refers to any item, piece of equipment,
or product system, whether acquired commercially, modified, or customized, that
is used to increase, maintain, or improve functional capabilities of
individuals with disabilities.
In a series of interviews in
Connecticut in 2010 with adults age 70 and older living at home, researchers
found most pieces of assistive technology in use in bathrooms were not selected
because of the resident’s specific bathing disability, but because the resident
had seen an advertisement for the piece of technology. The sources for
information did not include a professional needs assessment at all.
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Article adapted from Home Care magazine.
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