I have always felt that my parents had way too many doctor appointments due to their excellent insurance beyond Medicare, and we have recently been asked by the facility to let them do more of the doctoring. I realize that it is generally a two to three hour visit with transportation, waiting, the consultation, and then waiting for the transport back. This is hard on everyone, including the patient. The facility has a doctor who comes once a week, a physicians assistant who comes every day, in addition to all the nurses. I agree with allowing them to take care of general illnesses, but what about my mother’s psychiatrist who has treated her for decades for bipolar disorder? Or her oncologist who sees her twice a year for aftercare of breast cancer from 10 years ago? The ophthalmologist who treats them both for glaucoma? They have not been there very long, so this is all new to us, and we took care of them for so long. I would love to hear from some of you with more experience in this as we have a care meeting coming up pretty soon.
All the doc appointments had been a huge hassle, Dads scary driving, having to sit for hours in waiting rooms only to be told YOURE GOOD, SEE YOU NEXT MONTH.....And this usually by an assistant.
When they went into care I immediately signed them up for the in house doc service. The place has a doc, nurse practitioner, LPNs, RNs and can take care of all their needs. Does mom really have to get loaded up and driven to her cardiologist, her urologist etc? No...Staff can assess her meds and adjust if needed.
It has been a huge burden lifted for me and my folks.
I think we are going to feel more comfortable with letting the facility determine the necessity of all those requested specialist visits. I agree with the need to keep her psychiatrist. The doctor or nurse practitioner there is not qualified to treat my mother’s bipolar disorder. Any one of you aquatinted with this know proper treatment means the difference between functioning normally and utter hell. I was surprised to learn that it may not be necessary to see her oncologist after so many years of being in remission. I will look into this.
I do want to address one of the misconceptions someone posted about that residents in a NH don’t need curative medicine. It is true that a NH is the end of the line residence. My parents were never in an Assisted Living facility because, we, their children, Assisted them to live in their home for over 15 years. When it became too hard for us to do this, their ADL’s (adult daily living skills?) were so poor that they wouldn’t qualify for AL and had to go to the NH. Nevertheless, the residents in a Nursing Home need more professional care, both medically and physically, but many will live for many years in this end stage residence. Yes, there are those there who never leave their beds, but the cafeteria is also full of residents who can feed themselves, and then make their way back to their room or to some activity. I’m sure there are Hospice patients there, but the majority are not, and those residents will continue to get curative or preventive medical attention the same as anyone else outside the facility.
Again, thank you to everyone who answered. I am going to share your answers with my siblings. Your help is so appreciated and such a blessing. God bless all of you.
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