2011年7月7日 星期四

Working With Healthcare Providers: How to Empower Yourself and Your Loved One

Having been a nurse for....well, let's just say many years (PHEW), I know that it's important to teach?several important?things about medication management that help a caregiver to administer a medication to their loved one safely and properly.? Some of these things include:

Taking the medication in the right dose.Taking the medication at the right time.Taking the medication through?the right?route (you'd be surprised where some medications have been found).Taking the medication the right way (with food, 2 hours before or after food, etc.).The indications for taking the medication.The possible side effects of the medication.Signs and symptoms of an allergic reaction to the medication, andFoods (or sun) to avoid while taking the medication.

Most healthcare providers teach these same things, BUT...it is not uncommon for healthcare providers to neglect to ask the individual (and/or caregiver) how taking this new medication will affect their daily routine or their life.?

It? is the individual (or their caregiver) who will decide if the medication will even be purchased.? Then once purchased, it might not be taken (for instance, the individual or caregiver may remember that their father,?aunt or cousin was taking the same medication and did not do well with it).?

In my own case, the physician prescribed a powerful diuretic to my father who had dementia and difficulty getting to the bathroom on time.? You'd better believe that I cringed when that medication was prescribed and that I asked if any other alternatives were available because I knew the havoc that it would cause.

But many times the patient and/or the caregiver are reluctant to bring up their ambivalence about the medication or procedure to the physician or other health care provider before leaving the office.?

Healthcare providers ought to ask permission of the aging loved one or their caregiver before prescribing a new medication, treatment or surgical procedure, but because that is unlikely to happen anytime soon, we as caregivers need to empower ourselves and our loved ones by asking further information about what is being prescribed.

Here is my list of Who, What, When, Where, Why, How (and I added? "Will") ?to determine if a new treatment is appropriate for your loved one.

Remember:? You are allowed to question the healthcare provider and to say "no".? This will give the healthcare provider a chance to offer an alternate solution.

Who is going to monitor this?? (You? Your loved one?? Home Health Care? The lab?)What good is it going to do?Where will this take place? (home, hospital, etc.)When will this begin and when will it end?Why are we doing this?How will this affect our daily routine?Will it improve quality of life?

As citizens, we are allowed to make decisions about our healthcare and as caregivers, we must be intentional in making the best healthcare decisions for our loved ones, as well.?

Shelley Webb has been a registered nurse for almost 30 years, with experience in the fields of neonatal intensive care, dialysis, case management and eldercare. When her father came to live with her in 2005, the advantages of her medical experience became clear. Due to his dementia and congestive heart failure, her father was not able to care for himself alone any longer and so she took over these duties.

Having experienced the helplessness, frustration, overwhelm and even loneliness that caregiving for an aging parent brings, Shelley is well aware of the emotional and educational support that caregivers need and so she began The Intentional Caregiver web site. With its weekly newsletter, daily news updates and monthly audio interviews of experts in eldercare and supporting services, Shelley strives to encourage and educate caregivers so that they can be empowered to provide the best possible care for themselves while caring for their aging loved one(s).

In her spare time, she enjoys gardening, raising chickens, ballet classes and wine tasting.

Please see: http://www.intentionalcaregiver.com/

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