My father, who lives with me, had major surgery in October and has done very well in rehab. He will be coming home this weekend. He has his own first floor bedroom and bathroom about 10 steps away. We have a large home and the rest of my family resides on the second floor.
Before he had surgery, we caught him urinating in a flower vase one time and an empty milk jug. He explained that he was in too much pain (this problem has been corrected by the surgery) to get up and go to the bathroom. I explained firmly that this was not acceptable and that he needed to use the bathroom like everyone else.
In rehab, once he was able to get up and go to the bathroom, he has at times resisted that and continues to urinate (sometimes) in the container the facility provided him. I have explained to him, again, that when he gets home he will have to get up and go to the bathroom. His doctor has confirmed that he will be physically able to do this. Dad has no incontinence issues.
When I visited with him earlier this week, he told me to make sure that when I bring him home to ask the rehab facility if he can have a urinal to bring home. I explained, again, that he was not going to be going to the bathroom in his room. His response is to fuss about it and say, "Well, I might not be able to get up in time," etc. and then shut down the conversation.
Dad does not have dementia or Alzheimer's, but does have some sort of bizarre fixation with always feeling a need to urinate and having a fear that he cannot.
I have regular caregivers (OT, speech therapy, etc.) coming to our home as long as they are needed, and I know I will be able to get them to remind him of this. I was just wondering -- has anyone else been through something like this?
I am to the point where I feel like telling him if you can't go to the bathroom like everyone else, you are going to have to find another place to live (which is, in reality, not a financial option for me). Thank you --
It is definitely not being lazy. I know for myself, if I sit too long in front of my computer, then stand-up, oops I have to make a mad dash to the restroom, and hope I make it in time.
With your Dad, hopefully he will be pain free so it will be easier for him to use the bathroom. But you need to give him time to adjust.
What a lot of caregivers do is have a porta-potty in the bedroom in case the parent cannot make it to the bathroom in time. With your Dad's case, using a portable urinal will be much easier for him and everyone in the household until he feels more comfortable. He can empty out the urinal and clean it. I see nothing wrong with that.
If you decide to fight this issue with your Dad, I predict he won't comply, and you'll be miserable. Either make accommodations to him, or kick him out. (p.s. accommodations that we made included removing all carpet, a bedside commode and portable urinal. He agreed to Depends).
This isn't a bizarre fixation. It's a typical situation. He may be having prostate problems. He should talk to his doc.
You did not mention your father's age. Many men experience enlarged prostates and that can cause urinary urgency as well as difficulty starting to urinate. Here is some information: webmd.com/men/guide/prostate-problems#1
There are medications that can help if that is the issue, but if he has multiple medical issues I am hesitant to suggest more medications.
I think you have some good suggestions here regarding the urinal and or bedside commode.
Otherwise, you set yourself up for a war of wills and you will lose that one. For whatever reason, this is his preferred method. It is very difficult to try to control how another adult takes care of bathroom issues.
My suggestion is to make peace with it, set him up for success so that unpleasant odors are not an issue and move on. I know it is not easy and I do not mean to make light of your dilemma.
Best of luck,
Margaret
I really don't understand why a urinal would be objectionable, especially if he would empty it and clean it promptly.
I don't know if you have ever had urinary problems, but believe me, it isn't fun!
You could be right, it could be laziness, I suppose. I think it more likely to be some anxiety about having accidents.
In addition to the major surgery from before, your dad may also have separate and common problem with enlarged prostate and frequent urination.
He also eats in bed (something else he has done for many years) and has ruined his carpeting/sheets/clothes on a number of occasions. Trust me, it’s laziness. My mother passed many years ago and until he came to live with us, there was no one to try to help guide him to better habits.
I’m not trying to be mean, difficult or unsympathetic. I know I’m not going to change his behavior much. I’m just asking if anyone has had any success with helping improve hygiene habits with their elderly parents.
I just remembered something: my bro saw my dad's bedside urinals and said something like "That's disgusting. You can't pee like a normal person in a bathroom?" And my dad responded to that and ditched the urinals when he stayed at my bro's house. Something about my brother saying it helped to "shame" my dad into acting better when in other people's company. (My father is now in his own senior apartment and I don't know what he's doing these days, if same old habits or not.) Do you have siblings who can help to get the message across that this is unacceptable? What if you "tell on him" to his doctors? I did that with my dad, only to allow him to get someone else's direction besides mine, because he had stopped listening to me.
I just realized I'm assuming you're a woman, lol. If your dad is like my dad, he will respond better to having strangers or male siblings tell him to "go the bathroom like everyone else."
See All Answers