Mums been spilling a lot of drinks recently, usually tea/coffee. Her main problem is she will sit in her chair with a mug of tea/coffee and then suddenly doze off and spill it all over herself. I keep telling her to put the mug down between sips but she doesn't listen to me. I'll walk back in the room 10 mins later with her fast asleep, tea/coffee pouring all over her as the mug goes slack in her hand.
I've had many conversations about switching to a non-spill mug but she won't have it. Keeps saying she likes her drinks in bone china and refuses to drink them if they're in any other mug/beaker. So I've just compromised and always let her drinks cool for 20 minutes before giving them to her so she doesn't burn herself. Obviously, if I have the time I will sit with her and make sure she doesn't spill it. Worse thing is though, she sometimes refuses to change her clothes. Seems quite happy sat in soaked trousers/pants.
Not sure what the solution is really. Love to know if anyone else has had any luck switching to a non-spill cup.
I don't know how much time, your schedule or energy level is as a caregiver now. One other thought is, if your mother insists on drinking out of a bone china cup, is it possible to defer that to once a day-say 4 o'clock tea time or a specific time of day so that you'll be able to manage this easily and then transistion back to a safer way to have her beverages.
You can get mats to protect the upholstery, and if you're really worried about her clothes put a towel over her knee. A teacup holds no more than 250 mls, if that. There's a limit to how drenched she can end up.
Sippy cups are necessary for people with tremors, for example, because otherwise they'd never get a drink.
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Just like when my elderly mother with advancing dementia started vomiting up all of her food, it had to be diced into tiny bits from there on out. She didn't like that situation, but it was set in stone. She also had an adult sippy cup type thing to drink from after she'd gotten aspiration pneumonia and spent quite some time in the hospital and rehab recovering from it. She didn't like that sippy cup, but it prevented her from aspirating any more liquids into her lungs. Mom also had a thing about insisting on having red hot liquids to drink. I mean RED HOT from the microwave after coming out of the coffee maker-hot. Naturally, this was not allowed at her Memory Care ALF, no matter how loud she got about it. Red hot liquids and elders with dementia (or even w/o dementia) don't go hand-in-hand for obvious reasons. Rules are in place for a reason.
Nobody likes advancing dementia and the havoc it wreaks on them and on US, too. It's actually a living nightmare in so many ways, there aren't enough characters here to spell it all out, even. Compromises must be made in order to keep the elder healthy, and you sane at the same time. The above suggestion is one of them. Wearing adult briefs is another such compromise for elders who wet themselves continuously but 'refuse' to wear them, thereby destroying furniture, rugs and upholstery in the entire house. That option is not open for discussion either, so all the underwear in the drawer gets replaced with disposable pull up's.
This isn't a matter of 'luck' but a matter of you setting down the new boundaries for mom if she wants to continue the privilege of living with you or having you care for her at home. Compromises are necessary, even when they're met with resistance.
Wishing you all the best.
As long as she doesn’t object to the loss, the cup substitute approach sounds just about the kindest. Get her some bone china throw aways at a flea market or second hand shop. After she’s broken a few she may (or may not) decide that she should be paying more attention to your efforts.
Sounds like Mother is no longer independent with a cuppa 😔 due to the combined reasons of falling asleep + the open cup + not putting it on a table.
Why is she falling asleep mid cuppa by the way?
2/ Keep the tea in the tea pot and the coffee in a carafe and only serve small portions at a time
3/ Get one of those lap trays or better yet a table (like this one)
https://www.amazon.ca/Adjustable-Tray-Table-Comfortable-Built/dp/B07HVSX2NG
so she is more apt to set the cup down rather than hold it between sips
4/ Get her to come up to the table for her snacks and drinks, it's beneficial for her to move more anyway
My husband who only had use of one arm/hand after his stroke and later developed essential tremors in that arm, was spilling his drinks all the time. I finally only allowed him to drink out of a thermos, which made it much easier for him to drink without spilling.
For cold drinks ones with straws are easier. I am not a fan of the lidded cups/mugs for hot drinks. (I tend to dribble, have no idea why but I always dribble)
Be very careful the lidded ones they are usually insulated so they keep hot liquids hot for MUCH longer and cold stuff cold longer.