Bathroom Rugs Should Be Secure To
The Bathroom Floor
There are so many things that we
take for granted when we are young and in good health. I never
thought about how many steps we had to access or home, or how
accessible our home was on the inside. In fact I never gave a
thought to accessibility until I began working with disabled
adults. Even then I would look at their home and what needed to
change in order to accommodate their disability, it was not
until my father-in-law had a stroke that I began to take a
serious look at our home and how feasible it was for him to come
for a visit.
The front step to our house has three steps and a sturdy
railing. Once inside the house the doorway leading to the
kitchen area as well as the dining area is wide enough to
accommodate a wheel chair, however the doorway to the bathroom
on the main floor is too narrow for a wheelchair to pass
through. This is unfortunate because there is a walk-in shower
as well as a raised toilet seat in the bathroom. My
father-in-law is not confined to a wheelchair, however he does
have left side impairment that causes him to be unsteady on his
feet. The use of a walker does not help due to the weakness on
the one side. We decided that he would be able to come over for
a visit; he would need assistance getting in and out of the
house and also in and out of the bathroom. We did need to take
out the bathroom rugs for his visit. With the stroke victim you
need to be careful with any types of irregularity in the floor
surface, such as bathroom rugs create, because of the shuffling
motion that is made with the feet. The shuffling will cause the
bathroom rugs to bunch up and then the person will trip and
possibly fall.
The change in my father-in-laws abilities caused me to assess
not only our home but the home of my elderly mother. She has
used throw rugs for years in her kitchen in addition to the
bathroom rugs. She was reluctant to get rid of the rugs; but she
was willing to let me put secure backing under them so that they
would be less likely to slip. A few months later my mother
needed to have a home are agency come in to help her with
setting up her medications and to take her vital signs weekly.
On their first assessment they told mom that she needed to
remove the bathroom rugs for safety.
I used to think of bathroom rugs as a way to decorate the
bathroom and to bring different colors into the room. I now see
them as a possible danger for my mother as well as my in-laws.
It is nice to have a warm dry surface to step out of the shower
on, but you need to make sure that they are secure to the floor.