Everyday Life
With ALS: A
Practical Guide
If
you have ALS, or care for someone who does, this practical guide
will answer many of your questions about equipment, therapies
and accessibility that arise over the course of the disease.
Chapter 1 -
Equipment for Daily Living

Not long ago, there were few solutions
to the many problems and challenges that ALS poses. Fortunately,
that situation is changing.
New techniques and new products
are continually emerging that make it increasingly possible
for people with ALS to adapt to the disease, to pursue their
interests, and to continue to live rich and rewarding lives.
In this practical guide, you’ll
find advice and information that address needs ranging from
those of a person with ALS who is ambulatory and mostly independent
to those of a person who needs extensive assistance.
The guide offers in Chapter 1 a
broad sample of practical assistive devices that compensate
for weakness and fatigue and are available to help you accomplish
a range of daily activities – from eating meals to talking
on the telephone.
Spotlight
on Clothing and Dressing Hints
- Look for items with Velcro closures
or snaps rather than buttons, or consider altering your
existing clothing with these closures.
- Homemade zipper pulls can be made by
tying on a piece of cloth or attaching a circular key
ring, piece of fishing line, or other object.
- Rub the lead from a pencil on the teeth
of a sticky zipper to make it easier to pull.
- Slip-on shoes are easiest for dressing,
and those with Velcro closures avoid laces.
- Spiral, “no-tie” shoelaces
just need to be twisted once or twice and allow you
to secure a shoe without having to tie a knot.
- Elastic shoelaces look like regular
laces except for the elastic “give.” The
elasticity will allow you to slip shoes on or off more
easily.
- Long-handled shoe horns are helpful
for slipping on shoes without having to bend down as
far.
- Sock aids prevent you from having to
bend down to slip on socks. One version holds the open
sock at the end of a U-shaped device that has long rope
handles. Another consists of a wire or plastic frame
that holds socks or stockings in place for the foot
to be slipped into. Caregivers can place socks on these
aids in advance for the next dressing time.
- Whenever possible, sit while dressing
so you can safely rest as needed.
- If one side of the body is weaker,
it takes less effort to dress this side first. For example,
put the weaker arm into the shirtsleeve first, the stronger
arm next.
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