Hi,
My mom is 92, has later stage dementia, but physically pretty healthy. Being treated right now by a home health nurse for a bedsore, which is healing nicely. I have not met the nurse, but I have phone conversations and, frankly, don't like her. I don't think I'm hypersensitive, but she just sounds like an overbearing busybody trying to interject her agency into providing all sorts of other services just to get her claws into us, aka, make money. Sorry if this sounds unhinged, but I believe in less medical intervention than more. I'm not in denial regarding my mom's situation, but I know her and what works best for her. I feel the nurse is looking for ways to point out things we aren't doing so she can interject why we need hospice and her agency's services. I get the "ideal," but she doesn't seem to get we are working with a person with dementia and that all bets are off. Again, not looking for specific suggestions, maybe just feedback. Have you ever felt you were in a battle of wills with someone involved in the care of your loved one?
I live in a small town. Our Homecare agency is affilated with a Hospital. They can suggest their services but until an actual eval and Medicare approval nothing they can do.
I have never had a problem with people who come from our HC. Mom had PT and OT in my home. When they mentioned they would be here at 8 am in the morning, I asked that it be 10am or after because I needed to get Mom up, dressed and breakfast before they came. They accommodated me. PT showed Mom how to use her walker.
Now my Dad. He had a therapist that walked into the house and told him "Mr. E this is what you are going to do" my Dad "no woman is going to tell me what to do". Not my Dads first rodeo and the woman hadn't even evaluated him to see what hevwas capable of. Mom said she came on a little on the strong side. She was replaced.
I worked with visiting RNs. The head nurse was always saying the nurses were going into peoples homes. You did what you needed to care for them, visit if u have time but...keep your personal opinions to yourself.
As a footnote, I am the one who found the bedsore and through my mom's doctor, arranged for home care of the bedsore. My mom is getting outstanding care in her own home and by all accounts (including the home nurse) is doing quite well. We will continue to provide the best care possible. Happy Thanksgiving to you all.
You can tell the difference by the level of professionalism. I would suggest
you contact agency via email and keep paper trail. I've had a several care
givers and "friends" chum up my Dad who craves constant attention. Next
thing I know they're quite hostile towards me, although I take care of all
care coordination and hospitalizations, etc. All the red flags I've experienced
from boundary pushing care givers were unprofessional behaviors and either
just looking to be in control or make money (or in a few cases attempt to
access his bank accounts) . Trust your gut, document, but don't take anything
like this personally. It will affect your health.
If she is suggesting services her company provides, there’s two ways to look at it: either you prefer to find those services when the family is ready to see what’s needed, or one can take advantage of the idea you already have someone in place to offer quality care for your loved one and is letting you know what’s available “when that time comes” without the need of finding services and interviewing others.
Despite the horrific media surrounding care for our aging family members, not every person hired sees a elderly client as a “walking paycheck” to siphon off as much as they can. Technically, they are there to help - temporarily or permanently. While I get that this woman rubs you the wrong way, those that care for our family are in a tough job to handle not just their care, but to inform the family of any changes in the most compassionate way as possible.
if you do not feel she is capable of doing so, then the option of finding someone who can would be would make the family feel comfortable.
My mother has Alzheimer’s/dementia and is as strong willed in her illness as she ever was when she was healthy. Problem is that the disease they have will and does alter their behavior, and what was active before can be a safety risk (getting lost) when dementia is involved so the services she is suggesting may be something worth considering..... if one is open to hear the message behind the busybody / nosiness we would attach to conversations that WOULD be, in other circumstances.... would elicit a “mind your business” comment (with / without profanity 😊).
She is a nurse... I’m certain she’s aware of what a dementia patient can do...she’s not going to be as intuitive as a family member who know her prior to the diagnosis... so I would agree with the rest; give this woman the benefit of the doubt. I think the nurse is just flagging issues that can crop up in her care.
I hope this helps.
1 - she may be just trying to do an efficient job & is letting you know what is available - obviously you need help because you called her in ... the agency just didn't appear & knock on your door out of the blue!
2 - while you are trying to do your best quite frankly something was missed because your mom has a bed sore - nurse has seen hundreds of them & may be just brisk/old hat about them whereas this is a first for you to deal with
3 - nurse may see that bedsore as a signal that maybe not everything is being done for your mom otherwise why did the bedsore arise in first place so she is trying to help you - but realize that you are now no longer the sole control/care giver that you are used to being - you may still have to adjust to new circumstances with new inputs whereas before it was only you
4 - meet with her in person not just phone calls & why hasn't this been done already? where are you when she is there? - these nurses want to be helping their patients not doing administrative work A.K.A. phone calls to family
5 - you just might be hyper sensitive because you have made quite a judgement about someone you have never met or is it a bit of guilt that the bedsore bloomed under your watch?
6 - your write-up sounds like you live near/with mom but don't see the nurse so I assume you leave for work & mom is alone for some time & that's when the nurse arrives - she is seeing red flags all over the place if this is the case & is probably not telling you in the best manner but mom needs more help than she is getting - what you see as 'extra' that you don't think is needed but the nurse sees as getting optimized care for her patient -
7 - these nurses don't get a commission for offering/telling you about what services are available so she will tell you as a 'newbie' what you might not know about to assist you & your mom - I think you are too sensitive about how you are taking her comments but she may not have the best bed-side manner either
--My mom's primary doctor, who she sees every 3 months, says she is NOT yet ready for hospice.
--My mom's bedsore is small, healing nicely, and is her ONLY physical issue.
--She has someone with her at all times and receives great care - I am there myself 22 hours a week. Her best helper is the one who has dealt with the nurse.
--I have read online reviews of the agency from which the nurse comes and they are not exactly favorable.
--The nurse is obviously competent in treating the bedsore - the ONLY problem at the moment - so I have no problem with her skills.
--I have no doubt that the nurse cares about my mom and is making suggestions worth considering at some point.
--As Rosemary44 pointed out, I too believe that some agencies are trying to make as much money as they can from services.
--I view my job as advocate for my mom and her best interests.
Hope this clarifies things. Thanks for taking the time to respond.
But nurses are usually very comforting.
I did that with my dad's nurse- on the phone she didn't have much in the way of personality and I thought her brusque, but once I met with her in person and talked with her about dad's care and treatment options, my opinion of her greatly improved. She never pushed for services he didn't need even though his insurance and Medicare would have covered them, but did make us aware of them. Between the 3 of us we came up with a rehab plan that best suited my fatner's needs for the few months he needed them.
If you feel like you don't like that particular nurse certainly talk to the agency they are coming from and discuss your reservations. But I absolutely loved hospice and having someone to discuss decisions with and someone to lean on when I needed it. They took a big weight off my shoulders.
You are daughter ...nurse is not. You have all the say...remember that and try to see they do their job. Hospice has RN come and check care...If mom is getting bed sores she needs more care ...either she is staying in her bed too much or was in ER for hours..
But you can help yr mom ...also hospice is more natural based care ..i think you might like it. I am caring for my mom and she has started to decline...is more forgetful and this happens with so many as they are getting very old and for some it is the beginning of the 11th hour of life...facing this is hard but I am commited to my Mom that i want to help her till the last as much as i can in each stage so she is not alone or afraid. None of us get out of here alive...one in one die. But you know you can help make it better for her getting her good help . My heart is with you in this journey you have with yr mom... My mom takes very little medication but she may need it to get through at some point and i just am playing it by ear as I understand my precious mother will not be here much longer ...it is the way life is.
The question is, does your mother like the nurse? The nurse is there for your mother; if the nurse's personality truly does clash, of course another nurse can be requested. But the nurse is looking out for your mother's best interests.
What the others on here have said about the source of the wound being questionable, nurses being mandated reporters (all in the health field are mandated reporters), and the possibility of APS being called if your mother is left alone with dementia, all of that is true.
he was only on Aid and Attendance money which was first level 900.00
for only three years Dad was 96 when I applied for this WW2 vet...……….
and frankly the GP doesn't help....looks like they want all old people in a Nursing Home...…………...I mean you can barely get Dad to his Doctors office...….
Yes I do sometimes feel they want us to bring in the top brass when it’s not always necessary! Good to know they are there when and if we need them, I guess.
good luck to you and your mom!
Can I ask why your going straight through the (nurse,caregiver)in the first place. You should be working with her agency not her by herself. You have to be extremely careful about this bc you don’t just want anyone taking care of your mom. Whenever have a caregiver comes in to help you with your loved one you should be talking straight to her Homecare agency not directly to her! If you are getting bad vibes or feelings about this person get someone else! You have rights and so does your mom. Always remember that.
You can call her care coordinator ( not sure how it works where you live) You can ask for a different caregiver. You have to be very careful about whom ever you choose for the care of your mom. You never know what can happen when you are not there. Please listen to these feelings you are getting. You are getting them for a reason.
I hope you can find someone you trust. I know how frustrating it can be. I hope I have helped you some.
Making assumptions is not helpful. Being judgmental is not helpful. Telling her what she "needs" to do or not do is not helpful.
Let's try to help each other here. I'm sure the OP is doing her best, the same as the rest of us.
She may also feel that the family contributed to the bed sore by not moving Mom around enough.
To answer your question, I rarely battle with someone over differences of opinions/advice. I tend to go with the flow. However, anything major - like going to the clinic or the ER, or for medications, I tend to ask a lot of questions. But I'm never confrontational. All of my parents' home caregivers and visiting home nurses in the past 25 years - were used to my constant questions. Why you're doing it that way? I do it this way.... What do you think I should take mom to the clinic? Ohhhhh…. If their reasoning sounds reasonable, logical, I follow them. If I disagree, I tell them so and why. Usually, they will give me more time to eventually see that they were right. Or wrong.