Nurses Helping Nurses
allnurses Network: Central | Jobs | Books | Newsletter
allnurses: A Nursing Community for Nurses
Home General News Blogs Articles Students Region Specialty Degrees F.A.Q.
CNA - Nursing Assistant Discussions /

Differences between Nursing home, Assisted Living, and LTC???



Did You Know?
allnurses is the largest community for nurses on the web. We now have over 388,625 members! Join today to network with other nurses, laugh, share, and much more.

May 05, 2009 12:57 AM

Differences between Nursing home, Assisted Living, and LTC???


What are the differences between the three? Which of the three is the best\worst, hardest\easiest work enviroment? Are there any opportunites for CNA's besides these and hospitals?


Share

Search Tags
None
Top

 
Advertisement
Sponsored Links
 
Reply
2 Comments
No. 1
from DreamyEyes
Old May 05, 2009, 09:29 AM

Default Re: Differences between Nursing home, Assisted Living, and LTC???
LTC/Nursing home is basically the same thing from what I understand. Assisted living is *supposed* to be for residents who need assistance and not complete care like most residents in nursing homes. However, I have worked in an assisted living facility for almost 2 years now, and we have many residents who are complete care and require at least 2 aides to take care of them. Most assisted living facilities also have residents with dementia and Alzeheimer's, just as nursing homes do.

Out of all the 3, I wouldn't say one is harder than the other. It depends on the facility you work in. They are all going to be hard at times, but it's very rewarding.

You can also work in home care/private duty as a nursing assistant if you prefer more one-on-one care.
Top
 
No. 2
from fuzzywuzzy
Old May 05, 2009, 09:33 AM

Default Re: Differences between Nursing home, Assisted Living, and LTC???
Nursing homes and assisted living facilities ARE LTC. LTC just means "long term care."

I've only ever worked in a nursing home, but I understand that assisted living is less regulated than a nursing home and although they're supposed to have more independent residents, that's not always the case. That is of course just a generalization. I'm sure there are good and bad ALFs just like there are good and bad NHs.

Other options include home health care agencies, hospices, and rehab centers (a lot of nursing homes actually take a lot of rehab patients in addition to their long term residents)- any place where the nurses are going to need assistants. I think those kinds of job are less available, but they probably have better working conditions.
Top
 
Reply




Thread Tools


Who's Online
381 members
2,842 guests
3,223

24

lawsuit - But don't most RN's work through breaks/lunch...

0

Patient Evaluation of Retail Clinic Care

2

The hard to reach on-call doctor, and its effects on...

8

Woman charged with passing off prescription drug as...

19

Man in "Vegetative State" was conscious for 23...

2

Interesting article on ThedaCare's Collaborative Care Model

13

Possible breakthrough regarding MS

63

16th Philly area hospital to stop delivering babies: Mercy...

13

Really interesting article on Indian open hearts

10

High-Tech Pump Does What Her Heart Can't






Currently Reading This Page: 1 (0 members & 1 guests)

Interested in the hottest topics of the week? Subscribe to the Nurse-zine Newsletter.
Enter email address: