Nurses Announcements Archive
Published Jul 2, 2003
ceecel.dee, MSN, RN
869 Posts
We continually have trouble transfering hospital patients to a few of our local NH's if the patient has any skilled "nursing" need. Of course almost all of the transfers have PT/OT referals, and they welcome that, but IV antibiotic tx?, sterile dressing changes?, tube feedings?, PICC line?, central line dressing changes? No thanks, no thanks, no thanks, no thanks, and again, no thanks!
Today, one of their patients came as an outpatient for PICC line insertion, and the charge nurse called to say, "I really think he should stay the night to stablize". "Stablize?! He's not, nor has been, unstable! He is being D/C'd right now and we have sent along our routine care of the line, and detailed instructions on his antibx and it's infusion. Call us anytime with questions or in need of any support."
Do you guys deal with this? Is this the way it is everywhere? Thanks for any insight!:)
I forgot to mention above that we do use a home care infusion support company that could have gone out to in-service the nurses and be available for support, but the company also requires that you receive the antibx through them, and the NH had NO interest in this. They were also offered the services of a Home Care nurse to come in as a support person, but the response recieved was, "we do have RN's here you know". How could we have helped make this easier? (I was called to return a call to the DON of the NH (at home) to ease the transition to acceptance of the plan of care for this patient, and that went well, but the time consumed by the panic and call saying they didn't want him back seems unneccesary and expensive!)
Hellllllo Nurse, BSN, RN
2 Articles; 3,563 Posts
When I worked LTC, we did all of the above things you mentioned, routinely. Also trach care, TPN, etc.
Just had a "skilled" facility agree to do peritoneal dialysis on a pt, then boot her out after she'd had the surgery.
itsme
266 Posts
The LTC where I work handle all of those things, but the problem comes in when we only have LPN on staff and need IV push meds or something of that sort that is out of scope of practice for an LPN. I have no problem calling one of the hospital RN when I need to and I find that when I have a question and ask it in a professional manner that I get my question answered. They have came over to help us out when needed also. (our buildings are connected thru a walkway). The only time we have problems with those sort of skilled nursing requirements is when the staffing is low.. I guess as an LPN, with alot of experience, I still am not comfortable with TPN and PICC lines, we get very few of those, plus I dont think that those are in my scope of practice!! Better to get the extra help and be safe than sorry!! Have a great day everyone!! :)
CseMgr1, ASN, RN
1,287 Posts
renerian, BSN, RN
5,693 Posts
I think many long term care places only have nurses on certain hours (RNs) not 24/7. So the nurse managers who work all day have to come in during off hours, on days off to do skilled care. Sometimes the ratio of one nurse to a hall, 25 clients makes it almost impossible to do the care. One time I worked LTC/SNF and was supposed to do skilled care of 50 patients. Was impossible. That could be a factor.
renerian
kids
1 Article; 2,334 Posts
Originally posted by CseMgr1 If a facility is licensed to provide Skilled Nursing Services and is receiving Medicare funds, they had BETTER be performing "skills"!
If a facility is licensed to provide Skilled Nursing Services and is receiving Medicare funds, they had BETTER be performing "skills"!
True, but when it comes to skillable things that involve meds or a large volume of or special supplies the facility is not reimbursed under Medicare, is all part of the facility daily rate.
bernadettes
9 Posts
You guys are all missing the boat. While skilled nursing is certainly given to residents who reside in Medicare reimbursed facilities, there is no mechanism to get reimbursed for services such as mentioned in this thread. Our state's reimbursement is based on a mix of the resident's conditions and an ancient, rediculous tool to measure the mix (not the MDS). Additionally, in NYS, the code requires RNs only 8 consecutive hours/day. For example, our nursing home gets $158/day for each MA patient. A Medicare resident may bring in more dollars for a very short period, but then we are stuck with the long-term bills from expensive drugs and treatments. The current reimbursement system cannot take care of American's health needs in nursing homes!
Todd SPN
319 Posts
Exactly as you stated Bernadettes. Before admission to a LTC, they even take into account things like the possibility of the resident having to be transported to the hospital during the month for a procedure, supplies like topicals or special dressings that are not regular stock at the facility. All these items eat up the reimbursement funds.
caroladybelle, BSN, RN
5,486 Posts
And in some places the reimbursement is even lower. Therefore there is little impetus to take on patients that require expensive equipment and treatments.
Lori-Emma
5 Posts
Originally posted by Hellllllo Nurse When I worked LTC, we did all of the above things you mentioned, routinely. Also trach care, TPN, etc. Just had a "skilled" facility agree to do peritoneal dialysis on a pt, then boot her out after she'd had the surgery.
I thought a SNF had to have an Rn on duty 24 hrs, especially for medicare. At least in Illinois.
shelynch
6 Posts
re: the above SN issues. i am at a LTC/rehab facility and we consider ourselves skilled. i am IV certified and did home care for 12 years so i have no problem with TPN, IV antibiotics, trach care, or wound vacs, but many of the nurses would rather send the patient back to the hospital than start an IV to rehydrate or treat with antibiotics. our RNs are in-house only 8 hours per day so the LVNs are on their own after that. i'm one of probably 3 nurses that will start their own IVs. and....on that issue of keeping that patient overnight...can we say SHE PROBABLY DIDN'T WANT TO DO THE PAPERWORK. i am of the opinion that people are basically incompetent and given the opportunity to mess up, we usually do. a lot of nurses lack self-confidence as lvns. maybe when i get my degree i can change that in some minute way.