Gransnet forums

House and home

Indoor light sensors to prevent falls?

(16 Posts)
IloveLindt Thu 26-Sept-13 22:09:20

Thanks harrigran. Germans do indeed think of everything.

Deedaa Tue 10-Sept-13 23:17:54

You don't need to be in your 80's gracesmum my 6 year old grandson sleepwalks from time to time and has been known to pee in the laundry basket. My daughter has now learnt to point him hastily in the right direction grin

stacyjmes1 Tue 10-Sept-13 08:22:36

Message deleted by Gransnet for breaking our forum guidelines. Replies may also be deleted.

harrigran Wed 28-Aug-13 23:17:11

A few years ago we bought two Hulsta beds and one of the options was a motion censor on the plinth. When someone got out of bed and placed feet on floor a light shone along the floor. Germans think of everything smile

gracesmum Wed 28-Aug-13 22:41:28

I don't think you even need to be elderly to be disorientated in the night. I often wake up and have no sense of direction or where I am. I can even remember waking up and wondering who this man beside me in bed was and lying very still in case he wasn't meant to be there! I also have a fear when I get up to go to the loo that maybe I am still asleep and still in bed !!shock and pinch myself to check that I am awake. If that's what I am like at 65 I shudder to thin what I will be like by my 80's.
I like the sound of a sort of cross between a movement sensor and a nightlight. If it hasn't been invented yet, you could be on to a very good thing.

Deedaa Wed 28-Aug-13 22:07:36

Our cat didn't even have that excuse Hunt it was just sheer cussedness. The heat hoggers spend the night crushed up against the airingcupboard door grin

IloveLindt Wed 28-Aug-13 13:19:23

Thanks for all your replies. Nelliemoser - she is on antidepressants which make her more sleepy than usual but I think it is fairly common as you get older to wake during the night to go to the loo and to be disoriented in the darkness along with the fact that only a few months ago she was living upstairs and would have left her bedroom to go to the loo. I think we need a light in the bedroom to wake her if she gets out of bed but we need one which isn't so sensitive that it will be set off by movement in bed.

Hunt Tue 27-Aug-13 23:34:56

Deedaa , we had a cat that did the same-hot water pipe under the stair!

Deedaa Tue 27-Aug-13 22:45:14

We spent years with the light on the stairs on all night owing to the black cat that insisted on sleeping on the stairs. It seemed worth the price of the electricity to avoid the possible broken legs,arms or necks!

Nelliemoser Tue 27-Aug-13 09:48:51

I would suggest the sleepiness and poor memory itself might be more of the problem. Have you though about a note on her door to explain where the commode is.

Google the Alzheimers society. There are usually local groups who may have a a range of "assistive technology" products to help with this sort of problem, and be able to advise.

Hunt Tue 27-Aug-13 09:37:51

Ninathenana, did you mean night ''trips'' to the loo!! We have a 6volt car interior light on the landing that is on all night, also a bar which we put down at the top of the stairs which we have to pass when we go to the loo.

ninathenana Tue 27-Aug-13 09:16:30

Have you considered a childs night light. DGS has one that plugs directly into the wall socket and gives a low glow. Just enough for night trips to the loo.

JessM Tue 27-Aug-13 08:00:41

Indoor light sensors have been around for a long time. I think the problem in this context might be that they are over sensitive - if she lifts her arm up in the night the light might come on. They also turn themselves off on a time controlled basis. One in the hall might work?

NfkDumpling Tue 27-Aug-13 07:35:16

My mum kept a torch by the bed. A big chunky thing which was easy to find and could be stood up on end. (She kept the hall light on as well)

Iam64 Tue 27-Aug-13 07:32:36

It's a worry isn't it. My mum's sight was badly affected by dry macular degeneration. She had a number of falls during the night, and the only solution we came up with was to leave the light in the hall on all the time. Sorry not to be more help, hopefully someone will come along with better suggestions.

IloveLindt Tue 27-Aug-13 01:15:51

My 84 year old mother woke up during the night a couple of nights ago, didn't put the light on and got confused and went to the loo in the next door room. She isn't confused during the day but after a fall a few months ago has been sleeping downstairs in her dining room with a commode in her room. I think if she had a light sensor which came on when she got out of bed she would have seen the commode and remembered to use it. I just wondered if anyone had successfully used an indoor light motion sensor? Thanks.