Typical Day For A Home Health Nurse | Life of a Nurse

Hi guys, I thought it would be nice to start an ongoing thread to just post/vent about your usual day. With a lot of entries, it can sort of serve to show nurses who are thinking about getting into Home Health what it is really like on the good days and the bad. Specialties Home Health Article

Updated:  

Not a bad day today... started back per diem today.

6 cases, all in the same township. Not my usual zip codes though, so I did waste some time and scheduled visits akimbo, instead of in a line like I usually try to do.

8:00 am:6 pt's, one needed labs/medicare/had to drop off at nearby hospital, one needed a urine c+s/aetna/had to use quest lab...not local, but one in my neighborhood, so I'll take this on my way home. One prefill/and recert oasis, a discharge, a HHA sup, and one regular CP check. Did quick review, got all lab supplies, mapped a route, made my calls, route goes to hell b/c of this and that.

First lady, very sweet elderly woman, just d/c w pleural effusions sec to CHF. Also has bad COPD. I got her labs on first stick (w butterfly d/t horrendously fragile skin and bruising sec steroids), reviewed her meds, VS stable, edema but no change. Off I go.

Can't drop labs yet b/c I have to first get to next home by 10:30 or no one can let me in. This guy is mildly retarded and we prefill his mediplanner weekly. Get there, he hasn't taken several evening doses of meds. I prefill meds, call in refills...snag..RPh tells me the insulin pen is back ordered by manufacturer. We will have to prefill syringes, of course pt has no vials or syringes in home. Call endo and lv mssg re please give pt RX for vials and syringes d/t shortage. Check sugar (132) and VS, and off I go.

Stop and hospital drop labs, grab a sprite and pop tarts from the vending machine (thought I'd be in my own neck of the woods and could stop at my house for a bowl of cereal, starving now)

Next pt, had to get there before 1 or no one will let me in. This poor woman w MS is STILL on the commode since when I called at about 9:15! She is upset b/c her aide will leave at 1:00 and she hasn't had her BM. She doesn't want MOM or enema, since she will be alone and is afraid to risk having to lay in stool until eve aide comes, if they come. Usual bowel routine is q M-W-F, didn't go on Monday, but belly is nice and soft, + flatus, + BS. I advise her to try more fruit, and if no success repeat her suppos tomorrow. She does admit she didn't eat as much as usual on the weekend. Her aide said when she gave the sup this am, there was no stool felt in the rectum as far as she could reach. (Wow, this aide is a good one!!) Then I check her S-P tube site, looks clean, she was worried, Instructed her on S+S infection, got the UA/C+S from the S-P Tube, VS WNL, and off I go

Next, LOL who has CA, family doesn't want her to know. I get there, she looks good, hubby is cute, says "Boy, it's cold out there." We have a mini chat about yes how cold it is, only to have him do it again 3 more times!! (A tad forgetful I am picking up!) Dtr arrives midway into vs, says doc wants labs repeated later this week. Apparently, she was on spironolactone bid, another doc inc it to qid, her K went off the scale, they dec the spiro back to bid, and K is high norm so he just wants one more set to be sure. Call the doc, confirm the order (Uh doc, we can't take orders from family members!) VS WNL, review all meds, advise we will be back Thursday for labs. off I go

Next, funniest LOL, she answers the door in a robe and damp hair, her HHA just left and she feels clean and great. But she is all upset b/c she can't get the calculator to figure right. She asks me to double check her, which I did, and we figured out what happened, and she felt better. She was quite euphoric and agreeable, saying "Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah!" I was starting to wonder if she was flaky, but she knew to call her dtr, how to balance her checkbook and was taking her meds correctly. Then she pulls out five RX dated 1-21-03, two are new meds, but PRN types. I asked her why she didn't fill them yet, she says, My dtr has been sick. Having been just sick as a dog myself, I asked her what pharm she used, and for some reason, she uses one in my neighborhood so I offered to drop it off, b/c I know they deliver. She is so relieved, she gives me a big hug. Off I go

Last vs, still no real food and I am famished. The discharge. Cute LOL, very ambulatory, very sharp. Review s+s she needs to report for emergencies, meds actions, s/e, and VS stable, she will still have PT, so the discharge paperwork won't be so bad.

2:15 pm. Back to my township, drop wee wee at quest labs, drop off RX at the pharm, get to my house. Reheat leftover Chinese and get a huge glass of water. My bones are aching from being in and out of the cold so much.

Worked on paperwork until 4:45, finished time sheet. End of story. I'll take charts back in tomorrow since I am working. Tomorrow it is supposed to snow, which means a lot of people will call out sick. I was supposed to do 3 new admits, but will probably get stuck w seven revisits b/c we will have to triage for call-outs and snow.

Pretty routine kind of day today.

Anyone else want to share??

A Day in the Life of a Public Health Nurse...

 

Specializes in Correctional and MRDD.

Very good since I just got hired for HHC. I am an LPN and this would be my first HHC experience.

Specializes in Geriatrics.

As a level I Practical Nursing student, I just wanted to say thank you to all of the wonderful HH Nurses who has contributed to this forum. Not only have you given me a deeper insight into the field that inspired my desire to become a Nurse in the first place, but you've also haphazardly helped me to complete my professional development essay on HH Nursing!! I can't believe this thread has been faithfully rolling on since 2003! It literally reads like a book that I just can't put down!! As a past/current client of HH Nursing (for my son), I say keep up the good work, keep striving forward - you are deeply appreciated!!

Eleven years ago my son was Dx w/Hema A severe. It was a HH Nurse that came into my home with gentle hands and enduring patience that taught me sterile technique and how to access a port-a-catheter to infuse a 1 1/2 yr. old child - my child; who taught me how to run an IV machine at home around the clock by myself when his line became infected; who was there for me when I just needed respite. When my son came home from the hospital at age 4 after recovering from a systemic fungal/bacterial infection from his port, it was a HH Nurse that taught me how to palpate and access a peripheral vein. And she didn't rush me or make me feel as though there was some impending deadline by which I had to learn the procedure. And even though my first stick was successful, she continued to stand be my side week to week until my confidence matched my success rate (for I thought it was always a fluke that I got in & didn't blow it).

It was all of the wonderful HomeCare Nurses that complimented me and told that I would make a good Nurse one day. They educated me, and uplifted me so high too the point that I had a most profound epiphany. And now I can't see myself as being anything else but a Nurse! My heart is giddy with anticipation of the day that I can offer expert care, kind words, and a gentle touch to an individual in need (and I don't CARE how mushy that sounds!).

Anyway, just wanted to say Thanks and PLEASE KEEP THIS FORUM GOING!!!:redbeathe:redpinkhe:heartbeat

Specializes in Psychiatric nursing, Home Health nursing.

I've worked in HH as a Staff Relief Nurse. I see patients when a nurse is sick or on vacation, or just when the office is booming... needless to say this is a fulltime job with all the benefits. About the OASIS... thank goodness we have Coders at our office who fill in the OASIS code stuff.. we tell them what we think is the primary diagnosis and so on, and they fill in the code #'s for us (thank God...we just dont have time for this). Also, when it comes to the insurance, Medicare, Medicaid stuff... do like I do... ask which OASIS to use. After 4 years of HH nursing, this gets my goat. Fortunately, I work at a company who has staff that calls the insurance co's and Medicaid so they can tell us how many visits we can make. I used to work for an agency that the HH nurse had to do all of this...I got burned out and quit. With my co. we have wonderful LPN's who have desk jobs to help out the RN's in the field. If we need to contact a doctor, we call the PCC (LPN), give them all our info on the pt, they contact the MD and get orders for us and let us know. This is great because we can make our call to the PCC, leave and go see another pt.....no waiting around on HOLD for an MD's nurse to run down the MD and get orders....our PCC's do that for us.... It is awesome and it saves us HH nurses so much time. I am spoiled. Since I don't have my own case load... I usually have no info on the pt except diagnosis and meds... the LPN's are up to speed with the pt's and really help me out quite a lot. I must say that I actually LIKE my job, and that's a first for me after 11 years of nursing.

About the OASIS... people make it out to be harder than it really is. Just read the question and go with what mostly fits the patient. If there is a gray area I usually pick the "most worse" answer and hope that on discharge or recert that the same question would show some improvement.

On a last note... with the OASIS, just do the best you can and if you have a good QA person, they will help you correct any mistakes... don't take offense at QA... they have taught me so much just by all the mistakes I've made on HH paperwork. Your QA person is a good resource along with your Clinical Supervisor.

Home Health is very rewarding and most patients are greatful for what you do for them.

Specializes in family practice.

Worked home care right out of nursing school and i have been doing fro a year and half. I could say it has been kind to me so far. It has its best and worst days but i can say that the best days are more than the bad days. I dont do visiting care. I work for an agency and take care of just one patient. I do only one family and they are so nice. The best thing i can say that homecare has done for me is to improve my commnication skills which was at a low even after nursing schools. The nursing skills are not that much so i know i lost most of them

I am new to HH. I have been in the O.R. for over 25 years, and have decided to change the course of my life. Anyone know of any online teaching for newbies? I have been winging it for 2 weeks now, but am still still very uncomfortable in my skills. I have been thrown a few curve balls all ready, trying to do things that I have never done. I feel somewhat shaky on assesements. Haven't done admisssions yet, just visits. HELP please!

Specializes in Oncology, Home Health, Psychiatry.

Wow...this has been helpful!!

I am considering moving from a Med-Surg floor (with almost 4 years experience) to HH. My fear is I am also working on my Masters with the intent to teach, and afraid of another change. But if I don't get off my floor soon I will scream!!! :banghead:

I have been called for an interview, so I guess one foot in front of the other...

Any suggestions?? :confused:

Specializes in Home Health.
i've worked in hh as a staff relief nurse. i see patients when a nurse is sick or on vacation, or just when the office is booming... needless to say this is a fulltime job with all the benefits. about the oasis... thank goodness we have coders at our office who fill in the oasis code stuff.. we tell them what we think is the primary diagnosis and so on, and they fill in the code #'s for us (thank god...we just dont have time for this). also, when it comes to the insurance, medicare, medicaid stuff... do like i do... ask which oasis to use. after 4 years of hh nursing, this gets my goat. fortunately, i work at a company who has staff that calls the insurance co's and medicaid so they can tell us how many visits we can make. i used to work for an agency that the hh nurse had to do all of this...i got burned out and quit. with my co. we have wonderful lpn's who have desk jobs to help out the rn's in the field. if we need to contact a doctor, we call the pcc (lpn), give them all our info on the pt, they contact the md and get orders for us and let us know. this is great because we can make our call to the pcc, leave and go see another pt.....no waiting around on hold for an md's nurse to run down the md and get orders....our pcc's do that for us.... it is awesome and it saves us hh nurses so much time. i am spoiled. since i don't have my own case load... i usually have no info on the pt except diagnosis and meds... the lpn's are up to speed with the pt's and really help me out quite a lot. i must say that i actually like my job, and that's a first for me after 11 years of nursing.

about the oasis... people make it out to be harder than it really is. just read the question and go with what mostly fits the patient. if there is a gray area i usually pick the "most worse" answer and hope that on discharge or recert that the same question would show some improvement.

on a last note... with the oasis, just do the best you can and if you have a good qa person, they will help you correct any mistakes... don't take offense at qa... they have taught me so much just by all the mistakes i've made on hh paperwork. your qa person is a good resource along with your clinical supervisor.

home health is very rewarding and most patients are greatful for what you do for them.

gosh i would like to know what company you work for!!! seriously if you don't mind telling:clown:

thought i'd bump this thread...i'll chat about yesterday and today...

yesterday

saw:

#1 & 6: a quad w/4 pressure ulcers (3 stage IV, one stage II) for bid dressings changes.

#2 an elderly gent in one of the ritzy senior living buildings, for dressing change to a nearly healed skin tear.

#3lovely lady who lives in a rather rustic cabin with her hubby...had to do pin care to her arm, Fx wrist, slipped on ice.

#4 another lovely lady, French-Canadian, speaks english, but i have been practicing my french with her also.. had a CABG, then had an abcess from the donor site in her thigh...we have her open for dressing changes...we are in there 2x/week... nearly entirely healed...d/c planned for next week...(personally think she coulda been d/c'd last week...)

#5 pia. young joint replacement. wants to become part of her armchair. no motivation at all.

today

#1 saw my quad again for BID dressign changes..

#2 gent with skin tear again..also yesterday adn today he showed me his photo albums...lots of OLD pix,...

#3gent w/ s/p hip replacement, assessed his healing stage II pressure ulcer on his nonsurgical side, no doubt partially shearage from pushing himself up in bed...wife doing well with his care...probably d/c next week...

#4 pleasant lady with s/p fem pop...doing well...general assessment, no wound care

#5 Hepc....call to md re: 10 pound weight gain in less than 24 hours..also new rhonchi since last nursing visit 2 days ago.

oh...and i forgot...yesterday i did a suture removal...on a boxer...(dog)..my quad's roommmate's dog had a mass removed, benign, but couldn't get back to see the vet...i had offered to take them out, he was gonna find a ride...couldn't..asked me yesterday if the offer was still open...he was a good boy...

Love it!!!

I am considering going into Home Health. Most job positings have 'previous Home health experience preferred.' Not required but preferred. I have a BSN and 2 years experience as a tele nurse.

What is everyone's experiences with first applying for HH?

Also, I am wondering if some could share 'emergency situation' experiences.

From previous post "It is best to have some hospital experience as you are very autonomous in home health and have to make many decisions sometimes in emergency situations. You need good critical thinking ability,the hospital experience is very valuable."... examples?

Thank you!

I am a "novice" in HH and was doing quite well till yesterday ( or so I thought). The new Oasis C was introduced to me a few days ago..what I find daunting is the amount of paperwork involved and the high turn around of patients resulting in more paperwork. You do an Oasis for admission, one for transfers ( if pt goes to hospital), one for recerts if goals were not met during initial cert period. Another Oasis for discharge.Then there is the scheduling of visits, supervision of HHA's and packing up your supplies for use in the event you are in need on a visit which includes enough forms to fill a city library. Keeping track of frequencies and making appointments to do visits when pts go AWOL and do not ansewer phones. I am overwhelmed at this point to say the least..is this the usual learning curve associated with the transition to HH? In addition the patients recieving HH now have multiple chronic health issues and are in need of intensive attention to details, teaching and interventions. Critical thinking, organization and a strong sense of confidence in ones' skill is an absolute neccessity in this area of nursing. I wonder if I have what it takes..I am certainly giving it my best shot...(no pun intended) ...

I am a "novice" in HH and was doing quite well till yesterday ( or so I thought). The new Oasis C was introduced to me a few days ago..what I find daunting is the amount of paperwork involved and the high turn around of patients resulting in more paperwork. You do an Oasis for admission, one for transfers ( if pt goes to hospital), one for recerts if goals were not met during initial cert period. Another Oasis for discharge.Then there is the scheduling of visits, supervision of HHA's and packing up your supplies for use in the event you are in need on a visit which includes enough forms to fill a city library. Keeping track of frequencies and making appointments to do visits when pts go AWOL and do not ansewer phones. I am overwhelmed at this point to say the least..is this the usual learning curve associated with the transition to HH? In addition the patients recieving HH now have multiple chronic health issues and are in need of intensive attention to details, teaching and interventions. Critical thinking, organization and a strong sense of confidence in ones' skill is an absolute neccessity in this area of nursing. I wonder if I have what it takes..I am certainly giving it my best shot...(no pun intended) ...

You can avoid all of this by asking for a patient care job instead. Just do your extended care shifts and turn in your nurse's note for the shift and that is it. No Oasis anything. No charting a gazillion stuff on your own time. You can relax on the way home from your shift knowing that you don't have a mountain of charting to do on the kitchen table.

You can avoid all of this by asking for a patient care job instead. Just do your extended care shifts and turn in your nurse's note for the shift and that is it. No Oasis anything. No charting a gazillion stuff on your own time. You can relax on the way home from your shift knowing that you don't have a mountain of charting to do on the kitchen table.
I do both one to one and case management. I have a full time one to one in peds. The HH case management is per diem and supplements my income as a private duty nurse for a child . I posted to get some responses and point of view from other novice HH nurses regarding their experience at this stage of learning the ropes. I do enjoy the one to one...just does not pay enough...:redpinkhe