
Key principles of showering and toileting aids
Showering and toileting aids increase the risk to skin integrity because
- the person being naked when using or transferring onto the equipment
- educed seating surface area of equipment with apertures such as commodes, benches with apertures and toilets
- increased difficulty for toilet transfers where there are smaller circulation spaces
- increased difficulty of transfers onto shower commodes due to higher seat clearance
- machine-made seats having limited padding or heat-welded seams which can be sharp
- using the equipment in wet and slippery environments
Common problems with showering and toileting aids
- Only dry trials: Dry trials do not allow for an accurate assessment of the conditions in which the equipment will be in use such as the person being naked, wet and sitting for a prolonged time or reaching/leaning to do cares.
- Padding: Consider need for padded equipment for people who have sensory deficits including benches and toilet seats.
- Shear and friction: Can occur during repositioning to perform repetitive bowel tasks
- Sacral pressure: Positioning the sacrum on the rear of the seat aperture increases stability although increases pressure over the sacral region
- Natal cleft stretching or splitting: This can occur because of too much weight shift and movement forward into the aperture this can result from poor posture or the aperture being too big.
- Reduced stability and balance in an upright position: Positioning stability can be achieved with an appropriate combination of thigh, trunk and leg support. Seat-to-backrest angle, tilt-in space function, armrests and leg rest supports should all be considered to achieve stable seating in a commode.
- Poor equipment maintenance


It is important to maintain equipment and to check for:
- Brittleness of the vinyl where it loses stretch and conformity. This may appear as creases or cracks in the covering.
- Exposure of the baseboard, often along the inner rims of apertures where foam has lost resilience. Clinicians can assess this through palpation of the foam.
- Damage to the foam such as water ingress. Damage can be noted when air is expressed from the seat when sitting on it as visible compression of the foam.
