By Helen Evans, Senior Marketing Executive

When specifying bathroom equipment for someone with epilepsy, it can be tempting to look for a “safest” bath design.

But the reality is more complex.

Following recent epilepsy awareness training, our team has been reflecting on how equipment decisions are often made – and how important it is that they remain fully person-centred.

That’s why we’ve developed a new Bathing & Epilepsy Fact Sheet – designed to support Occupational Therapists and specifiers in making more informed, person-centred decisions.

Read and/or download the fact sheet

Beyond the Specification Sheet

As a UK manufacturer of specialist bathing systems, we understand that no single mechanism or feature guarantees safety. What matters most is how the equipment integrates with the individual’s care plan, environment and support network.

Equipment must be viewed as part of a wider strategy – not a standalone solution.

The Critical Factor: Airway & Speed

If seizure activity occurs during bathing, the priority is immediate:

Protect the airway and remove the person from risk as quickly as possible.

How that happens will depend entirely on the individual and their care environment.

  • Some may benefit from a platform bath that lifts them clear of the water.
  • Others may require rapid water evacuation.
  • In some settings, hoisting onto a safe area may be the fastest option.
Each approach has strengths – and each carries its own risks. Hoisting can be rapid, but maintaining airway protection during transfer is challenging. Rapid-drain baths remove water quickly, but can create slip risks for carers. Rising platforms support manual handling but take time to complete a lift cycle.

There is no universally correct answer.

Equipment Must Follow the Care Plan

Specification should never be driven by equipment trends or familiarity alone.

Instead, it must be based on:

  • The individual’s seizure type and frequency
  • Triggers and duration
  • Carer skill and availability
  • Environmental layout
  • Manual handling requirements
  • Emergency procedures

The right solution is the one that aligns with the person’s clinical needs and documented care plan.

Asking the Right Questions

The most important starting point is not the product. It is the question:

  • What happens if seizure activity occurs?
  • Who does what?
  • How quickly can risk be reduced?
  • Is the emergency procedure realistic in this specific environment?

When these answers are clear, equipment selection becomes more informed – and safer.

Beyond the Product

True safety does not come from a feature list.

It comes from:

  • Early conversations
  • Clear risk assessment
  • Thoughtful design
  • Appropriate installation
  • Ongoing support and training
As manufacturers, we bring detailed product knowledge – but more importantly, we bring experience in supporting professionals to think through the practical realities of real-life use.

Final Thought

Bathing can offer comfort, dignity and therapeutic benefit – but only when risk is properly understood and managed. There is no fixed solution for epilepsy and bathing. There is only the right solution for the right person, at the right time, in the right environment.

Visit www.nationalepilepsytraining.co.uk for information on the training and care services available to a wide range of organisations, practitioners, managers and individuals.

Cotswolds Farm Park Changing Places Toilet Accessibility Hoist
A happy girl in a Astor Bannerman ceiling hoist sling, with support from her parents,