I had a big scare this morning. I was napping and I awoke to the smell of smoke. The closer I got to my mom's kitchen the smokier it got. She had put bacon on the burner, sat in her recliner, and fell asleep. We have a smoke detector right above her range and it did not go off. This detector is constantly going off - even if my mom is just boiling water. This time it did not. My biggest fear with my mom is a house fire. We have talked about this several times. She cannot put something on the stove or in the oven and just fall asleep. I have bought her timers to use but she doesn't use them. I made her promise me, today, to never put anything on the stove or in the oven if she is going to sit in her recliner and fall asleep. She did promise but I know this is going to happen again. Other than making sure the smoke detector still works (or why it didn't) are there any other suggestions for alerting her when she left something on the stove too long. Any new devices out there for the protection of the elderly. I live with her but cannot be with her 24/7. Thanks.
What will you do about this, do your think, Summer?
And watch out for the microwave! Anything that gets nuked that has metal in it can start a fire. And yes, something cooked for 20 minutes will be incinerated and the smell is ghastly.
Doubtful your mom would pull the stove out from the wall and plug it back in.
Worse if the stove is gas....
"talking" to a person with dementia is as helpful as talking to the door. They don't 'get' what you're saying and it's just frustrating.
IME: people show signs of dementia long before they are actually dxed with it. For some reason, Drs seem really hesitant to give that Dx without family member kind of pushing it. My MIL cannot even score a 1 on the BIMS test, yet the person who administered it to her said she was 'mildly' disoriented.
She hasn't been allowed to use the stove in over a year and has burned numerous things in the microwave.
When was she last given a good physical? My dad was doing this and it was a medical problem that was treated and the falling asleep was much improved.
He had 70# of water in his system because of CHF and his kidneys were starting to shut down.
Please get her seen by a good doctor(s) and rule out any medical causes for the sleep issue.
One thing I would encourage, put additional alarms in the kitchen but not right over the stove, heat and debris from cooking can ruin them and they don't work. One over every doorway is what the fire department told us. They should be checked and cleaned at least annually, to ensure proper functioning.
I believe that you can now get ones that set all of them off when any one goes off. I think that is a stellar design for fire alarms.
You do not indicate if your mom has any other problems but a few suggestions.
Disable the stove.
Strictly microwave use from now on.
You could use cameras so you can monitor her if you want.
You do not indicate in your profile any medical conditions mom may have.
If mom is on any medications that may make her sleepy maybe the kitchen is off limits for cooking unless there is someone with her or nearby to monitor her.
And...if she has dementia forget any "promises" that she may make as she will not remember what she said, why she said it and the dangers of leaving a stove unattended.
Disable the stove, for now take the knobs off, remove pliers from the home so she cannot manually turn on. When you want to use, put the knob back on.
That is why in most AL there is no range, no oven and at some no microwave either. In MC there is totally none. Thank God, the place would be burned to the ground.
Obviously, she can't hear the detector or does not understand what it is.
Sounds like there is dementia going on. Might be time for her to be placed in a facility, for the safety of all involved.
The stove will have to be disabled. No way around that.
Did she get clear from the UTI?
This is a good reason to make sure she’s supervised 24/7, but that’s very hard to do at home. Even when a caregiver is in the room, the person with dementia can try the darnedest things. For instance, my loved one tried plugging the wrong end of their phone charger into an electrical outlet. Another walked out the door at 2 a.m. to go to work. I’ve known of people who would put food in the microwave but not use the right setting, and the food caught on fire.
This is why memory care facilities exist.
Have meals delivered to her.
Look into at home caregivers or placement in a facility.
We unplugged my MIL’s stove. She can use the microwave.