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5 senior winter safety tips you need to know

Senior winter safety

Today’s guest post from Caryl Anne Crowne of Senior Helpers offers 5 senior winter safety tips to ensure a great season, rather than one with injuries and accidents.

Few people enjoy the unrelenting subzero cold and wind during the winter months. But preparation is doubly important when you have senior family members under your roof. As the temperatures drop, make sure you take all of these precautions before ice and snow sets in.

Senior winter safety: Prepare now

1. Prepare for power outages

Depending on where you live, snow storms are a grim reality for a few months every year. And sometimes, the storms are strong enough to cut off power for days or even weeks. For younger people, this might just be an annoyance, but for seniors, it could lead to issues like hypothermia, malnutrition, or confusion.

To prevent these potentially fatal issues, have a generator on hand with plenty of fuel to tide you over for at least a few days. And remember to always keep it outdoors to prevent carbon monoxide poisoning.

Also, invest in flashlights and candles as short-term solutions, or in case your generator runs out of fuel prematurely. Finally, keep some food and water rations in a safe place if your refrigerated food goes bad.

2. De-ice your sidewalks and driveways

Frozen driveways and sidewalks are precarious enough without the added difficulties of old age. Keep up with weather reports, and if inclement weather is expected, salt every walking surface well in advance to prevent ice accumulation.

Then, after snowfall, be sure to clear pathways of obvious obstructions as well as treacherous black ice that could lead to broken bones or head trauma. By implementing these preventative measures, you will make your homeโ€™s outer areas far safer for the elderly in the neighborhood, including your family members.

3. Check your car

Itโ€™s pointless to prevent home accidents if you donโ€™t get your car ready for winter too. While this is actually the best time of year for your carโ€™s mileage, there are many other factors that take a toll on your rideโ€™s integrity.

And breaking down when your senior is in the car could quickly lead to hypothermia or frostbite before help can make the trip to your location.

Before the cold weather sets in, have a full diagnostic performed on your vehicle. Hereโ€™s a list of components that need special attention at this time of year:

  • Antifreeze
  • Oil
  • Battery
  • Defroster/Heater
  • Tire tread

Itโ€™s also smart to keep an emergency kit in your car at all times, containing items like a snow brush, scraper, salt, flashlight, a blanket, and a battery-operated jump starter. You never know what may happen, especially on long drives during the holidays, so donโ€™t take the risk!

4. For senior winter safety, fight the flu

Winter isnโ€™t just the season for holiday cheer โ€“ it also marks the peak of flu season. Most teens and adults can fight this infection if they decide to go without immunization, but young children and seniors have a much harder time when they fall ill with the flu.

While flu vaccines arenโ€™t 100% effective, they still reduce the risk by between 40 and 60%, so anything that can help prevent the likelihood of your senior from catching a potentially fatal illness is far better than no prevention at all. And with vaccinations starting as early as late-August, itโ€™s best to get them done well in advance, as it takes about two weeks for antibodies to develop.

5. Bundle up

If you have a well-functioning heating system in your home, then it can be easy to forget just how unforgiving the weather beyond your front door really is. This leads us to underestimate just how many layers are needed to keep warm.

And with poor circulation in old age, seniors can easily lose feeling in the extremities. After long periods of time in below-freezing temperatures, they then become susceptible to frostbite.

If you can help it, itโ€™s best to stay indoors in these conditions, but if you absolutely have to venture outside with your senior, make sure to layer them in a shirt, sweater, and downy coat to keep their core temperature up, as well as a hat to keep heat from escaping from their head.

Also, invest in thick socks and gloves, as well as a quality pair of snow boots to prevent the problems mentioned above.

About today’s writer on senior winter safety

Caryl Anne Crowne is a contributing writer and media relations specialist for Senior Helpers. She regularly produces content for a variety of caregiving blogs, discussing different ways of improving senior quality of life.

26 thoughts on “5 senior winter safety tips you need to know”

  1. Hi Christy:
    Excellent points… Glad to admit they have become a priority at my place. I have no idea what the builder thought when he poured my parking pad at 15% grade.
    With normal day to day chores and times people coming and going getting rid of snow and ice is imperative.
    One thing for certain is no cowboy boots and I near live in them. I have done a few very gracious moves heading down to the street, all in slow motion so the neighbours will have something to talk about.

    Excellent post and so timely… Hugs from Alberta

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