English
English Chinese Simplified Chinese Traditional French German Portuguese Spanish Russian Japanese Korean Arabic Irish Greek Turkish Italian Danish Romanian Indonesian Czech Afrikaans Swedish Polish Basque Catalan Esperanto Hindi Lao Albanian Amharic Armenian Azerbaijani Belarusian Bengali Bosnian Bulgarian Cebuano Chichewa Corsican Croatian Dutch Estonian Filipino Finnish Frisian Galician Georgian Gujarati Haitian Hausa Hawaiian Hebrew Hmong Hungarian Icelandic Igbo Javanese Kannada Kazakh Khmer Kurdish Kyrgyz Latin Latvian Lithuanian Luxembou.. Macedonian Malagasy Malay Malayalam Maltese Maori Marathi Mongolian Burmese Nepali Norwegian Pashto Persian Punjabi Serbian Sesotho Sinhala Slovak Slovenian Somali Samoan Scots Gaelic Shona Sindhi Sundanese Swahili Tajik Tamil Telugu Thai Ukrainian Urdu Uzbek Vietnamese Welsh Xhosa Yiddish Yoruba Zulu Kinyarwanda Tatar Oriya Turkmen Uyghur Abkhaz Acehnese Acholi Alur Assamese Awadish Aymara Balinese Bambara Bashkir Batak Karo Bataximau Longong Batak Toba Pemba Betawi Bhojpuri Bicol Breton Buryat Cantonese Chuvash Crimean Tatar Sewing Divi Dogra Doumbe Dzongkha Ewe Fijian Fula Ga Ganda (Luganda) Guarani Hakachin Hiligaynon Hunsrück Iloko Pampanga Kiga Kituba Konkani Kryo Kurdish (Sorani) Latgale Ligurian Limburgish Lingala Lombard Luo Maithili Makassar Malay (Jawi) Steppe Mari Meitei (Manipuri) Minan Mizo Ndebele (Southern) Nepali (Newari) Northern Sotho (Sepéti) Nuer Occitan Oromo Pangasinan Papiamento Punjabi (Shamuki) Quechua Romani Rundi Blood Sanskrit Seychellois Creole Shan Sicilian Silesian Swati Tetum Tigrinya Tsonga Tswana Twi (Akan) Yucatec Maya
Leave Your Message
How to Choose Adult Diapers? How Long Can One Last? — A Practical Guide from the Production Line
News

How to Choose Adult Diapers? How Long Can One Last? — A Practical Guide from the Production Line

2026-02-02

  Which Type of Diaper is Best for Adults?

Choosing an Adult Diaper is like choosing shoes—only the wearer knows what fits best. The first crucial step is to assess the user’s mobility level.

 For Active Users — “Pull-Up Pants” Are the First Choice
Who it’s for: Seniors who can walk independently or with minimal assistance, those with mild incontinence (e.g., leakage when coughing), or individuals who need to go out for errands or travel.
Why it works: They are as easy to put on and take off as regular underwear, greatly preserving the user’s dignity and independence. Well-designed pull-up pants have side tear seams, so if they become soiled, they can be torn open from the sides even when lying down—no need to remove shoes or pants. It’s a very user-friendly feature.

For Bedridden Care — “Tape-Fastened Diapers” Are the Better Option
Who it’s for: Individuals who are bedridden long-term or have limited mobility, with moderate to severe incontinence.
Why it works: The side tapes can be adjusted repeatedly, making it easy for caregivers to change them with one hand without having to turn the user over completely. Their absorbent core is typically thicker, and the back waist features higher leak-guard barriers, specifically designed for lying-down postures to enhance leak protection.

Important Addition — “Underpads”
Note: Underpads (bed protectors) are supplementary and should not replace diapers. The correct way to use them is to place one under the diaper as a “double insurance,” especially useful at night or during prolonged bed rest.

In a nutshell: If mobile, choose pull-ups; if bedridden, choose tape-fastened diapers. This is the most foolproof first step.

adult pull up pants.JPG

 How Many Hours Can a Diaper Be Used for Adults?

This is a question that requires serious attention. Time alone isn’t the only factor—absorption saturation and skin health are the real priorities.

Basic Guideline: It’s recommended to check and change every 4 hours or so during the day, with a maximum of 8 hours. At night, this can be extended appropriately based on the situation, but one diaper should never be used for an entire night.

 Key Indicators — Three “Saturation Signals”:

Dampness to the touch: Press lightly on the center of the diaper through one layer—if it feels damp and not dry.

Visible sagging: The middle of the diaper appears noticeably swollen and droopy due to fluid absorption.

Signs of leakage: Slight wet spots begin to appear on the sheets or underwear.
If any of these signs occur, change immediately! At this point, the absorbent core is nearly saturated, not only losing its leak-proof function but also creating a damp environment that can quickly harm the skin.

Situations Requiring Immediate Change:
Regardless of how long it’s been used, if there’s a bowel movement, clean up and replace the diaper right away.

Important Reminder: Never try to “save money” by extending usage time. The cost and suffering caused by incontinence-associated dermatitis (rashes, broken skin) or urinary tract infections triggered by prolonged dampness far outweigh the price of a diaper. Changing frequently is the most economical and humane investment in health.

adult diaper.png

 As producers, our responsibility is to build reliable safety into our products. A high-quality Adult Diaper delivers value through its precise absorption and locking system, its breathable “air-permeable” backsheet, and its body-hugging, leak-proof design. What it can do is provide the utmost safety and convenience for users and caregivers within the recommended usage time.

 By choosing the right type and following a scientific changing schedule, Adult Diapers can transform from a “necessary consumable” into a trusted partner in preserving dignity and comfort. This isn’t a hassle—it’s a smart, modern approach to care.

News Categories
Featured News