How physical is home health?

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Specializes in LTC, med/surg, hospice.

Hi, I'm speaking with the director about a in-hospital transfer to home health ( from med/surg). It would be a weekend plan with 12 hour day shifts.

I have read through several threads and think home health would be a great change of pace for me.

I wondered how rough is home health (not private duty) on the body since you are doing visits alone. Do you have to do a lot of patient lifting/turning and help with ADLs?

I work on a medical floor and of course we do a lot of turning, bed changes, incontinent care of heavier patients etc but we generally have help of another nurse or nursing assistant.

Thanks!

If you are doing intermittent visits, most of the physical side would be involved with all the driving from one case to another. If you are not doing wound care, there would not be much patient hands on contact beyond the physical assessment.

Sorry to disagree, caliotter! Very physical, at times! Carrying your bag up 3 flights of stairs can be tedious! Also, I have known some nurses to sit on the floor to do leg care, like dressings/wrapping.

I can certainly recall schlepping my gear 100 ft or more to a front door in rain or snow. Not fun. And if you have a laptop, it may weigh more than 10 lbs.

Sometimes you have no help turning a patient because the family will take the time you are there to 'disappear'.

And I have had to lift a 3-liter bag of fluids to an IV pole that was slightly over my head. Doesn't seem to weigh very much until you do it!

So you need to have a good back.

Best wishes!!

It can be demanding on the body at times. Like you said, most of the time you won't have help transferring or turning clients. There's been many instances where I've done wound care to lower extremities in a squatting/kneeling position. Also I've encountered clients who have low beds (no hospital beds that can be raised) so it becomes a challenge. And the driving is tough too.

Specializes in Pedi.

I don't think it's as physically demanding as the hospital but, as others have said, you sometimes have to be in awkward positions to get things done. I have taken a child's blood pressure while they were playing on the floor, I do a lot of port accessing or dressing changes while kneeling because the child wants to recline on their couch. It's not like the hospital where you can just raise the bed to avoid killing your back while you reach into inaccessible areas to pack a wound.

If carrying my nursing bag around were too challenging for me I would find a way to do without it.

I think it varies patient to patient. I do all pediatrics an mostly infants now but when I did adults, there were hoyer lifts inside the homes for the heavy patients and if I couldn't turn a patient myself, I would ask an adult family member and usually never had a problem. Agree with the posts about awkward positions to get things done and kneeling on the floor and sitting on the floor is daily for me. But it's not the whole time, just a few min here and there. The heaviest thing that's been killing my back is actually my work bag because it's so full! But it's overdue for a clean out anyway.

Specializes in LTC, med/surg, hospice.

Great answers. Thanks everyone. This gives me a little more insight.

Specializes in COS-C, Risk Management.

I'm an RN with back problems. In my experience, HH has been less hard on the back than med-surg floor nursing.

Specializes in Home Health/Peds PACU.

You may want to consider desk case management in home health. It isn't bad on the back (as long as sitting doesn't bother you).

I do a lot of home health tasks on my knees (no dirty minds here!). I take a lot of blood pressures on my knees because it is easier on my back than bending down. I draw labs this way as well. I also can do wound care this way. I was once "marked down" on a performance eval because of this. I told the "supervisor" that the patient was laying on a low couch, how would she have done it differently? (the patient was on the couch, the wound was on his foot, the patient took up the entire surface of the couch. the complaint was that I put the supplies on the floor. The only other place would have been out of my reach, and I would not have been able to maintain the proper technique with the wound care supplies so far away.

Back on topic, you will do things differently in order to maintain/help your back. It is not as hard on your back as some other forms of nursing, but there are still adjustments to help yourself and your back!

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