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

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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...

 

Hi Hunter, glad to have u stop in to say hello. Yes it is hard and wonderful to be a nurse.:) I have never helped with operations, I saw an operation in nursing school and got totally sick. But there are alot of nurses there that love it. Are you going to be a nurse or doctor when you grow up? Well have a great day. :balloons: :biggringi
Hi Hunter, I love your name! It is so cool! Nursing is hard, but anything worth doing is :balloons: hard, right? If things are not a little or a lot hard then they are usually boooooring! :o I do not like boring, do you? Home health nursing is sooo fun. I feel like a real adventurer :coollook: most days riding around in my little red car and getting to meet and care for all kinds of fellow human beings. :rotfl: What is your favorite subject in school? :p :p :p Study hard and be kind. :balloons: :balloons: :rotfl: :p
Specializes in Med-surg > LTC > HH >.
Hi Hunter, I love your name! It is so cool! Nursing is hard, but anything worth doing is :balloons: hard, right? If things are not a little or a lot hard then they are usually boooooring! :o I do not like boring, do you? Home health nursing is sooo fun. I feel like a real adventurer :coollook: most days riding around in my little red car and getting to meet and care for all kinds of fellow human beings. :rotfl: What is your favorite subject in school? :p :p :p Study hard and be kind. :balloons: :balloons: :rotfl: :p
HI Nurseneesy and Mollie, thanks for replying. I like to help people out :) ,buuuut I dont think that I would like to help people that are dieing.All the Docters are aiways telling u this or that ,and there yelling,dont it get annoying:uhoh3: ?Naaaaaaaaaaaa.I wouldnt be a Docter or Nures cause it sounds soooo hard but my little 5 year old sister does want to ba a doctor. Her name is Shanya.My favorit subject in school is wrighting. I have already written 2 novels that are scary. Mom call me the next steven spilburg and steven king i'm already writing shrek 3.Ihave the best scoor in wrighting ,Igot a B in that.I got 2 Bs and 1 C.Ok,talk to u later, hunter:) :p

HI!!

What programs are us going to be using in the feild? I am trying to track down feild programs for Oasis

madeline rn

Great thread, Hoolihan.

I have worked Med-Surg for 4 years and 1-1/2 years with Hospice.

I just took a Home Health job and will start March 6. I will do some case-manager and some home visits. Altho I did home visits w Hospice, and had done a little cross-training w HH, this will be a real change for me. I am really looking forward to it. I have an ortho prob w my left ankle and really needed to get a job where I didn't pound the floors for 12-14 hours.

We are going all computer and have lap-tops for our paperwork in the field. Do you have experience w this? I am fairly computer-competent and have no fears of it.

The thing I have NO experience w is the insurance stuff. With my Med-surg backgraound, the nursing skills and documentation skills are what got me the job. How hard is it to grasp the insurance, OASIS, etc.???

Any input will be welcomed. :)

Hi!

I live in NE Wisconsin and all of our documentation is computerized. The visiting nurses have laptops. We are using a program called PTCT. A new upgrade will be coming out next Fall. We use pathways for all the Oasis timepoints. It has the most common diagnoses, with the ICD codes. The OASIS questions have palm trees on the pathway. The visiting nurses are able to complete over 90% of their documentation in the field. If you have computer knowledge, you will find it easy to use! We recently went with a different model of Home Health. I was promoted to Casemanager. I no longer make visits. I develop the plan of care, visit frequencies and contacts with the Dr's. It has greatly reduced the stress and workload for the visits. Nearly all of the meds are in the program, and show interactions between the meds. We love having the computer for charting!

Donna

I can't go into details about my daily routines, but I did home health for about 8 years and I really enjoyed it. It has it's negatives but remeber this: your worst day in home health is still 5 times better than your worst day in the hospital setting!

AMEN!!!!!!!!!!

Hi, I am soon to be a nursing student and have a few questions...I was wondering if its possible to go right into HH from nursing school? I have a friend who did, she works in peds HH and really likes it. I have a BA in psych and bio. I'd be getting my assoc. RN from a community college, if this makes a difference or not, I don't know. I would work 'on the floor' if its recommended, however I have 2 kids(both of them will be school age by the time I'm finished) and the hrs seem to be brutal. Anyway, any adivce would be appreciated!! Thanks!

Jennifer

Hi, I am soon to be a nursing student and have a few questions...I was wondering if its possible to go right into HH from nursing school? I have a friend who did, she works in peds HH and really likes it. I have a BA in psych and bio. I'd be getting my assoc. RN from a community college, if this makes a difference or not, I don't know. I would work 'on the floor' if its recommended, however I have 2 kids(both of them will be school age by the time I'm finished) and the hrs seem to be brutal. Anyway, any adivce would be appreciated!! Thanks!

Jennifer

Jennifer. you should look up other threads pertaining to home health. 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. Good luck! :)

Specializes in NICU.

Thanks for a terrific thread! This is great reading for those of us considering HH. You perform a great service... thank you!

Specializes in Home Health.

Tomskatt, thanks for that, it was my intention, and it has just taken off, and I am so glad. I hope you find what you are looking for.

Kasey, I agree with Alintanurse, it is best to have some hospital experience under your belt. It is brutal, I won't lie, but if you can stick with it for a year, that would be a solid background for HomeHealth.

There is a lot of pt education in homecare, and that is really hard to give if you don't have some first hand experience in pain management, identifying wound infection, subtle changes in cardiovascular status, etc..

That said, it is not impossible to do HH as a new grad. But, I think you may have difficulty convincing an agency to hire you w/o the expereince, and if they did, you would need a much longer and supervised orientation. Recent threads here suggest that is not happening in reality. Even expereinced nurses don't feel they have gotten enough orientation.

I agree, the hours are great for a parent, and so is the flexibility.

Can you work as a Home Health Aide for a few months while finishing school? This may give you some insight, and make the agency more willing to take you on. You would also be able to make observations, see the other nurses occassionally in the field, and still not have all the responsibility until you pass your boards. You may also do this and say, Ug, I hate this, who knows??

Good luck to you, let us know how it works out.

I thought I would give you my typical day as a home health aide. Which I think is quite interesting.

7am-8:30am

-Get up, shower, drink my hot cocoa, look at my schedule and out the door I go

8:30-2pm

-First client, 27 years old, 3 years ago involved in a DUII MVA. Resulting in fractured back, crushed pelvis and closed head injury. Was in a coma for 2 months. Currently is ambulatory, can do many things on her own however cannot stand or sit for long periods of time. So she cannot hold a job. She is in the process of getting SSDI.

-I get her up in the morning, shower, help her dress, medications, cook breakfast. Then I start cleaning. THe house is trashed everytime I come there. THe day before I am there I leave the house spotless but the next day it is trashed. Her husband is the laziest person in the world. Will not even do a dish, take the trash out, pick up his clothes, I could go on and on. They also have a child so that adds to the mess. I just take a deep breath and begin my 4 hour cleaning routine. Make beds, do dishes, wash clothes, scrub bathroom and kitchen floors, vacuum, pick up toys (client cannot bend over to pick things up), scrub toilet and so on. I love cleaning, its something I have always like to do I guess I am weird like that. So I really don't mind cleaning. What bugs me is how incredibly lazy her husband is. He NEVER does anything! I was told I was only supposed to do my clients laundry, dishes and pick up after her, no one else. WEll, I cannot really do that easily. I guess if it gets really bad I can go on strike and make him do something. He is really immature and spends what little money they have on video games. Lovely, huh? In fact I had to buy my own cleaning supplies.

-And besides cleaning I have to make sure my client has everything she needs, assist her with her shoes and socks and other things. WHen I first started working there their house was awful, black mold everywhere, just terrible. Now with me there we are starting to organize things so its not so bad.

2pm-6pm

-My second client, 50 some year old lady with COPD, Fibromyalgia, diabetes, and on oxygen. I do the same for her as I do with my other client except she is more of a hoarder, stuff everywhere. She has a problem with sugar, eats a lot of junk. Sometimes she has me make a cake or a batch of cookies and eats all or most of it! WOW. THe one thing that really scares me is that she smokes while she is on oxygen.

Anyways, I cannot emphasize how much I love my job. Although its not really reliable, your never really guarenteed hours or would if someone dies or gets their hours reduced. I get health insurance through them which I really need so I hope I don't have a problem with that.

Anyways, that is my typical day. I hope I didn't break any confidentiality rules, I didn't name any names and I didn't say the town or state so hopefully I am okay.

Thanks for listening. CS :coollook:

Oh forgot to tell ya....the big thing at this hospital right now is we are scheduled for JCAHO in April. So, of course, all the managers are trying to get us prepared. I asked about what I could wxpect...I think I will get off easy b/c I am a new employees to the HH...bt I might get picked out to answer questions regarding orientation stuff. We have been given a booklet of info to know in prep for inspection. The nurses told me that the HH Mgr made a game out of it w few weeks ago....had a meeting where they played "Family Feud" and asked questions...one person was the "Richard Dawson" character, dressed in s uit and tie etc...she said she did the role except for NO KISSES, lol....the winning team got prizes of little plastic bird feeders filled with jellybeans for their desks. How cute![/quote']

If dog's are like children, only with fur, then are children like dogs, only without it? Loved your essay, new to this site, not sure how it works, hope this gets to you. A RN for 25 years, been away from the bedside for ten years. Specialized in gero-psych, seems like most of the patients expressed in these posts are elderly, many with some behavior problems, some perplexing to the nurses. Moving away from behavioral health, applied to HHA. Lots of field experience, nothing in the recent order of you guys. If they hire me, sure, it's a risk, taking a chance on me, but so am I. I'm encouraged by your optimism and gratitude. Do I have the same to look forward to, even though I don't have the recent med-surg experience you have grown fond of but didn't mind leaving behind for this experience?