10 Tips for Home Health Nursing

As a Registered Nurse, this year marks my 20th year in home health nursing. It has been a wonderful ride and I have met some interesting patients and co-workers along the way. I have worked in the field and in the office. The following are some tips I have learned from experience and my peers. Specialties Home Health Article

1. Have a good sense of humor.

You have to learn to laugh at yourself. This is a good practice for most aspects of your life. But if you take yourself too seriously, no career will be enjoyable.

2. Be open minded.

Toto, we are not in the hospital anymore. In the patient's home, you are no longer in a controlled environment like a hospital or doctor office. You still have to follow your agency's policies, safety rules and perform procedures correctly, but if the patient requests you enter their home and take your shoes off because of religious reasons, you do. The beautiful woman that presents as your patient, turns out to be a man. (You learn this without warning when they drop their drawers for the dressing change you came to perform. The scheduler thought it would be funny if you were surprised.) Diversity is one of the wonderful aspects of home care, you learn how other people really live. Learn to appreciate different cultures.

3. Learn to modify.

You have to hang an IV. It's after hours and the pharmacy forgot to send the IV pole. The hanger over the door may work, or the broom handle strapped on the upright vacuum suddenly creates a wheeled IV pole. But always make sure that your modifications are safe and appropriate, otherwise, it will come back to bite you in the ....

4. Be flexible.

The day you planned will change, guaranteed. There is an accident on the freeway, now you are late. The patient has a doctor's appointment they forgot to tell you about and now they aren't home. Someone called in sick so now you have 5 extra visits. If you can't be flexible, home care may not be your bag.

5. Be prepared.

Sure enough, the dog ate the patient's box of dressings, or the patient has a bed sore that did not show up on the hospital discharge information. Your car trunk should look like a supply closet.

6. Be organized.

For those home health nurses that drive a car between patient visits, your car is your office. It should contain supplies, paperwork, computer and cell phone battery chargers, pens, marketing flyers, etc., etc., etc. Learn to plot your visit route. With the cost of gas nowadays, you don't want to have to drive needless miles.

7. Have basic computer skills.

If you don't have them, learn them. Many home health agencies have already gone to field staff carrying laptop computers into the patient's homes. It is the way of the future.

8. Be alert and be safe.

You may be presented with many new dangers that you won't see in the hospital. Take a self-defense class. Learn what areas are the "unsafe neighborhoods" in your territory. Visit those places early in the morning. Always be alert to your surroundings. Don't talk on your cell phone while driving. Follow safety rules.

9. Don't be afraid of paperwork.

If you work for a home health agency that performs Medicare visits, YIKES, what paperwork (thanks in part to the Medicare Paperwork Reduction Act?)!! An OASIS is not a desert paradise. Those agencies that have laptops for their field staff have part of this licked. However, the questions still need to be asked and documented. Practice does help speed up the documentation process.

10. Keep your skills up.

Take continuing education classes online. Attend seminars. Read articles. Knowledge is power. You are very autonomous in the patient's home and good skills and quick thinking are mandatory to survive.

In closing, home health is a wonderful way to care for patients. You are able to interact with the family and really do one-to-one education. Whether it be with a Medicare agency, Hospice, private duty or other home care venue, it is an enjoyable and full-filling division of nursing. Remember, many home health nurses believe:

A bad day in home health is better than a good day in the hospital.

jwiz214. Hi, just starting on my 2d nursing job hh! semiretired from hospital but still need few more yrs till I can Hang up my nursing cap[which I actually did wear in 'the day', darn thing kept getting stuck on curtains]. I believe I,ll be alright, but my manager is seeming to be overwhelmed with her own work load and I believe I,ll have to follow her to her clients to get some preceptoring and her inside knowledge of home health. wish me good fortune! thanks for your postings.

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Thanks for the article. It was very insightful. I am starting home health after 21 years of doing other types of nursing....so I'll see how it goes.

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How was your experience starting out in Home Health as a new grad?? I am in the same situation and was offered to start in March.

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Specializes in FNP- BC, Med-Tele, PCU, Home Health Case Manager.
mcgar said:
How was your experience starting out in Home Health as a new grad?? I am in the same situation and was offered to start in March.

I start my first HH case manager/field RN next month too! I've been a PCU RN for 14+ months so I have hospital experience but nervous abs excited to start HH! Are you doing private duty or field RN and visiting many different pts a day?

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