Independence at home
If you have a disability that makes living alone difficult, making some adaptations to your home may help. You may also get extra support to help you live in your own home, including anyone is blind, deaf or sight or hearing loss.
Living in your own home
If you need improvements and adaptations to your home so you can continue to live there independently, you may qualify for help.
A health and social care assessment with the social services department of your local trust is often the first step towards getting the help and support you need.
Following an assessment your occupational therapist may recommend types of equipment and ideas about adapting your home.
You may also be entitled to financial help, such as a Disabled Facilities Grant to pay for adaptations or improvements to your home.
Independent living support
The Independent Living Fund (ILF) offers payments to people with severe disabilities.
The payment can be used to help you live independently, for example by employing a personal assistant.
Help from the Housing Executive
Your local Northern Ireland Housing Executive (NIHE) office can tell you about services and about the housing association properties in your area and can advise you which may be suitable for you.
The housing office can also tell you about supported or sheltered housing and care homes in your area.
Supported or sheltered housing enables people to live independently but with extra daily support.
Independent living if you are blind or visually impaired
There is range of equipment available to help you live independently at home if you're blind or visually impaired.
Help from your local trust
Aids and equipment are often provided through your local trust.
The Health Service Hospital Eye Service can also prescribe a range of aids for people with partial sight.
All blind and visually impaired people are entitled to a health and social care assessment from their local trust. This means someone from the trust will assess your needs to make sure you get the equipment and services that are right for you.
Your trust may put you in touch with a rehabilitation worker, who can help you learn new ways to manage everyday tasks.
Rehabilitation workers can also teach you how to get around safely and how to communicate more easily - for example, by teaching you to type or use writing aids and communication software.
Everyday equipment to make life easier
Tools and gadgets
A wide range of tools and gadgets are available that make it easier for blind and visually impaired people to manage household tasks.
A few examples are:
- devices that alert you when a pot of liquid begins to boil
- gadgets that make a sound when a cup or container you're pouring liquid into is nearly full
- knives with an adjustable guide to help you cut slices of even thickness
- tactile watches and alarm clocks
You can buy products designed specifically for blind and visually impaired people and get advice on specialist equipment from some charities and other organisations, including the Royal National Institute of Blind People (RNIB).
Accessible technology and telephones
Computer products and telephone systems that are particularly useful for blind and visually impaired people include:
- mobile phones with tactile, well-spaced buttons and a function that reads text messages aloud
- telephones with a very large colour-contrasting keypad
- computer screen readers
- magnification software
Equipment and services for leisure at home
Sight loss doesn't have to mean that you can't enjoy television, books and other printed media like newspapers and magazines. Some products that may be helpful include:
- talking books and talking newspapers
- Braille, Moon and large print books and magazines
- audio description for television
- magnifiers for television screens
If you're registered blind, you're entitled to a 50 per cent discount on your television licence.
Independent living if you’re deaf, have hearing loss or tinnitus
There is a range of equipment available to use at home, if you’re deaf, have hearing loss or tinnitus.
It includes:
- textphones
- listening devices
- alerting devices, such as specially adapted doorbells and alarm clocks
Equipment and aids for home and work
Help is available with everyday situations involving telephones, textphones and listening equipment.
Extra aids include induction loops which work with your hearing aid, alarms, alarm clocks, doorbells and teletext adapters.
You can get equipment and advice about the different types of aids available from social services, National Health Service audiology departments and voluntary organisations.
Telephone aids
Devices to help you use the telephone include:
- handsets with inductive couplers
- amplifiers
- extension bells
- text display
Relay UK
Relay UK has relay services for deaf, hard-of-hearing, and speech-impaired people.
Textphone
Not everyone wants to use a mobile, tablet, or computer to make their calls.
You can still use your textphone (Minicom/ Uniphone).
Alarm clocks and watches
Alarm clocks if you’re deaf, have hearing loss or tinnitus, can work in different ways. The key features for clocks are that they:
- vibrate under the pillow to alert the user
- have a flashing light
- have an extra loud sound alarm
You can also buy watches that vibrate.
Doorbells and equipment that alert you to sounds
As well as doorbells that alert you by a flashing light or a very loud ringing bell, there are other multi-alerting systems that can be used to attract your attention to different sounds in your home, for example when the telephone rings.
Smoke alarms and fire safety
You can get smoke alarms that use strobed light and vibrating pads to warn you at the first sign of fire.
Vibrating pad smoke alarms are specially fitted with a vibrating pad which is connected to the smoke alarm and can be placed under your pillow or mattress. The pad vibrates when the alarm is activated.
Strobe lights which are fitted to a smoke alarm will emit a flashing strobe light warning when the smoke alarm is activated.
Linked alarms are connected to all the other smoke alarms in the building so if the smoke alarm is activated, it triggers all linked alarms. This means that even if the fire is some distance from where you are, you will know about it and can leave the building before it gets any closer to you.
It is recommended that you contact a qualified electrician to install linked alarms.
Television and home entertainment
Television subtitles and sign language translation of TV programmes are improving access to TV for deaf and hearing impaired people.
Health and social care assessments
As assessment by your local trust means that a specialist may look at your individual needs so the right support, including equipment, can be provided.
Communication support
Communication support includes British Sign Language (BSL) interpreters, lipspeakers and notetakers.
Find out about how it can be arranged and examples of communication support in certain situations.