Re: Should I try home health?
Hi there, I am a new nurse... very new- just graduated 6 months ago! I currently work in LTC and my case load is ridiculous. Even for an experienced nurse I think it'd be difficult. I have 31 patients, all their meds (scheduled & prn, patches, creams, eye/ear drops, breathing treatments, inhalers, etc), treatments, insulins, etc. I have to deal with the doctors calling, the family asking questions, other nurses wanting to know what's going on and wanting your help when you have a (rare) free minute, the nurse's aides, etc. It's nuts!
I went on an interview today at a local home health place, and it sounds really promising. I did home health as an aide while I was in school, and I really really enjoyed the 1-on-1 interaction I was able to have with patients. You get to know them, their families, their habits, what works for them as individuals. That way, you can tailor your care and make it specific to them.
If I get this job, I will be travelling to see 6-7 patients a day. Each visit should last about 30 min.-1 hr. Maybe more, maybe less, depending on the patient or situation. It's Monday-Friday, 8am to roughly 4pm. She said there are many days I might be done at 1pm and just need to finish my paperwork. They give all their nurses laptops to work on, and I can go home OR to the office to finish the paperwork, or just finish at the patient's house before I leave. I'll be on call every other weekend from 5pm-8am, but I was told it's somewhat rare to actually have to go on a call in the middle of the night. A lot of times, you can advise them what to do over the phone, or if it's a true emergency, advise them to call 911 or go to the hospital. (I also get $2/hr just for being on call...even if I don't deal with any patients!)
There are also some perks that I thought were pretty great: they pay your cell phone bill every month since you use it in the day to talk to patients/the office, take on-call calls, etc.... 50 cents/mile reimbursement, free medical coverage if F-T, travel time is paid (which was a benefit I never had being a home health AIDE).
Look into home health agencies around your area... see what works. The place I interviewed with is locally owned & operated by a family, so I get a sense that it's an intimate setting, not too driven by ''corporate'', etc.
All I know is that I can't take 11-12 hour days anymore (especially when my shift is only 8, AND especially since my facility cut overtime. I only get paid my usual rate, not time & a half). They also just cut the shift differential, and are sending nurses home due to low census. I need to get out! Haha
GOOD LUCK!
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