ModuleDraft

Stairs after stroke — safety plan, rails, alternatives, and when to remodel

In-depth stairs module: high-risk stair moments, rail/lighting/tread concepts, stairlift vs bedroom relocation decisions, and OT/PT training prompts.

Recovery & RehabCaregiver, SurvivorAdvanced16 minStandard (9–12)

Educational only

Educational only — structural changes should be done by qualified professionals; ask OT/PT for personalized stair training.

Get help now

If you fall down stairs or hit your head (especially on blood thinners): seek urgent evaluation. For new stroke-like symptoms: call your local emergency number.

Key takeaways

  • Reduce stair risk with lighting/rails/training
  • Decide when to avoid stairs or relocate rooms
  • Know when a remodel/stairlift evaluation is warranted

Why stairs are high-risk

  • Fatigue
  • Balance
  • One-hand limits
  • Neglect/vision

Immediate safety steps

  • Good lighting
  • Remove clutter
  • Non-slip treads
  • Shoes

Handrails (concepts)

  • Continuous rail
  • Secure anchoring
  • Both sides if possible

Technique + training

  • Ask OT/PT
  • Use cue words
  • Slow is safe

Alternatives

  • Relocate bedroom
  • Add commode on main floor
  • Delivery strategies

When to remodel/evaluate

  • Repeated near-falls
  • Cannot safely carry items
  • Caregiver strain

Practice check

What you’ll practice

These questions are untimed. After you answer all of them, you’ll see your score and a clear next lesson or reference step.

0 of 4 answered

Question 1

1. Stairs are high-risk after stroke because:

Question 2

2. An immediate safety step is:

Question 3

3. A good handrail concept is:

Question 4

4. Repeated near-falls on stairs suggests:

References

  1. CDC
    Older Adult Falls
  2. NICE guideline NG236
    Stroke rehabilitation in adults