Tonight while I was helping my mom at dinner another resident with dementia came into the dining room and she was told she was supposed to stay in her room and have a tray. She refused and eventually found a place to sit and proceeded to help herself to the drinks that were set out for someone else, and after some discussion she was allowed to stay. It left me to wonder what would have been done if this person had something more serious than a cold, how would they keep her from wandering?
For example, to use a seat belt on a wheelchair or bars on a bed. They can try to isolate yet it doesn't mean it will happen...
Guess it was a major problem in the past (elders were getting strapped into bed and unable to move! Can you imagine?!)
I've asked someone who works at a different facility and they just shrugged and laughed. The most they can do is to take them back to their room and try to confine them to their own wing or floor. And if they have a room mate... sigh. Now I have a better understanding of why illness sweeps through facilities so rapidly and completely.
Usually senior facilities will lower the bed down to as far as it will go, place fall mats on both sides of the bed. My Mom was a climber, even though she could no longer stand up her brain through she could, thus Mom would be tumbling out of her bed on a regular basis. Eventually stuffing pillows all around her helped, but it made it difficult for Mom to roll over to get to another comfortable position.
and her roommate was relocated
She got a bit stir crazy being kept in a room with nothing to do - no tv
Others far sicker than her were still roaming and spewing germs about but she did test positive for the flu