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There are alarm clocks that get progressively louder if you don’t turn them off. I agree with two — one on other side of room.
Also is he on your friends Apple account? If so, she can do “find my phone” and make his phone ring until he picks it up. It comes through even on DND and it’s really loud. |
+1 - though the sleepiness caused by antipsychotics can be totally debilitating so I sympathize. Also OP, does he have a timer on a light in his room set to turn on when his alarm starts ringing? Something like this https://www.acehardware.com/departments/lighting-and-electrical/timers-and-lighting-controls/timers/3001316 |
They could try that, although he definitely sleeps through the sun coming up |
| What about a bed shaker device? It's a thing that goes under the mattress or pillow that Deaf people use as an alarm clock. |
PP whose son also has difficulty. My son says this feels like an earthquake and he Never slept through it. The only problem was turning it off and going back to sleep. |
I am going to get one of these for them. His mom says they'll try, but the issue is going to be with getting it turned back on for the second day. It seems like there are some that automatically reset. Do you have one to recommend? |
We had an ihome one. I don’t think it was programmable and I don’t know if they even still make them. But I did see some 7 day programmable ones on Amazon. |
| I would ask a friend to sleep over and wake him up in the morning for a short trip period, and work on a new alarm setup when she is home to get him more independent. |
Yeah, this. Is there someone she could ask, and/or, someone she could pay, to either sleep over or come over early in the morning? It seems like having someone just check in on him might not be a bad idea anyway. |
I was a poster saying to hire someone, but has she tried an Alexa? If she has the app on her phone she can "drop in" and talk to him over it. They could even try it before she left town. |