roadracer wrote:
re: Plastic pants, I was sent what the medical supply company calls rubber pants (thick rubber material), and a pull-on pant made of a semi-transparent vinyl material. Are those what I should be using, or are there better options?
B Brian, have you tried the reassure overnight? What premium products do you recommend to try? I am fully disabled, on medicaid, and really limited on what I can spend per month. My plan was to continue to use what I get threw medicaid while at home, and use the reassure briefs at times when I need to avoid leaks. I am totally open to try other options, just need to be limited on quantities
I looked up the Dry 24/7 that seems to be popular, but I would be really limited in how many I can buy/use per month
Rubber and plastic are just two possible options. There is also vinyl and PUL (poly urethane laminate). I personally like the pul since it has a nylon outer layer, and waterproof inner layer. The gary activewear pul pants are also contoured and have the softer pul material wrapped over the elastics. This makes them much more comfortable for me to wear. And as a bonus you can machine wash them.
As for the premium diapers. I prefer confidry, with northshore supreme as my backup. You cannot look at diaper costs as a per diaper cost though. You have to look at is as a cost per day.
Lets say a mid range diaper might only cost $1.00 each, but you have to change them every four hours. Not bad right. So in a 16 hour day you just spent $4.00.
Now look at a more premium diaper. The confidry for example costs a little more than $1.50 each. Except these diapers can easily last 8 hours before needing to be changed. So in that same 16 hours you only spend a total $3.00.
As you can see from this example, the "cheaper" diaper is actually costing you more. Plus, with the cheap diaper you are taking them close to their leak point a lot more often (every four hours or so). You are taking more risks with them. And you are forcing yourself to change twice as often as you really need to be.
In most cases it just doesn't make any sense to not use premium diapers.