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SeniorStruggles Asked April 2021

When healthcare professionals are rude/insensitive?

The visiting nurse called me to set up her first visit with stepmom today since her back surgery ~10 days ago. I said stepmom is in a lot of pain, and that she is often confused about taking her meds (4x/day, 24 hours a day). I said my father is also confused, despite the schedules, reminders, explanations, etc. that I've tried to instill in their minds and house.


She said, "Then you have to go do it yourself." I instinctively said, "No!" Oops. Then I explained that the round trip costs me more than 30 minutes, and always expands to other things they need, which turns into hours. But she was condescending, suspicious and mildly insulting to me for the rest of the call.


I feel angry, hurt, annoyed, misunderstood, guilty, overwhelmed, frustrated, sad, exhausted, tearful, rageful and wiped out simultaneously. This is too much for any of us to do!

EmotionallyNumb Apr 2021
Doesn't sound like it's anyone from the hospital to me. Probably home health nurse? Also sounds like your parents need assisted living or daily home health.

JoAnn29 Apr 2021
Usually when someone is released from a hospital, if they refuse rehab "in home" will be set up for therapy. In my experience, u will hear from them way before ten days. Mom got home from the hospital early afternoon on a Thurs and they called me not 2 hrs later asking to admit her on Friday. I said no because she had come back to my home and I and she needed a few days to adjust and get some kind of schedule going. Monday would be better.

You really need to watch how you talk to these people. They think that children should do the care no matter what their life is like or the pressure they are under. Sometimes better to just listen to what they say and take out if it what you want/need.

I agree that its time to place your parents.

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BarbBrooklyn Apr 2021
Call the Patient Advocate at the hospital and see if they can cut through the red tape to figure out which agency
And how to get her onto rehab, pronto

funkygrandma59 Apr 2021
It's seems obvious to me that neither your father or stepmom should be living on their own any longer. Time to be looking for the appropriate facility for them to move to. Perhaps this nurse instead of making you feel bad, can assist you in finding the right place for them. Best wishes.

MJ1929 Apr 2021
Good lord. I had back surgery -- pretty minor stuff, too -- when I was about 45 years old, and it took eight weeks before I was able to do everything I used to do.
"Bouncing back" at 81 will take months, and frankly, she'll never bounce back to where she was.

I agree that a higher level of care and probably a rehab place is the best bet this soon after surgery, especially if she's in a lot of pain. You can't control that, and your folks are just plain scared.

GardenArtist Apr 2021
I was puzzled until I realized that your mother apparently was sent home directly from the hospital, the visiting nurse was not from a home care agency of which you or your mother agreed,  and that apparently your mother had no before returning home? 

I totally support Barb's suggestion.  I can't imagine anyone having surgery, especially for a back, and not spending the allowed Medicare time in rehab; it's a major step forward to returning home.

Was this a small hospital in a rural area? 

As to your question to Maple on determining which agency sent this individual, she should have left either a card, or a small packet of information on the plan, including a signature sheet agreeing to her treating your mother.   I've never yet worked with any agency that didn't provide the relevant documentation to get started, authorize treatment, include a calendar and other basic information.

I always made sure to be with my father on the first day of home care, and make sure we got all that relevant information.   The visiting nurse was amiss in her duties if she didn't provide this data.

BarbBrooklyn Apr 2021
Call the surgeon's practice. She needs to be admitted to rehab, now.

BarbBrooklyn Apr 2021
That is an indication that they need a higher level of care.

Call back and ask how to make that happen.
SeniorStruggles Apr 2021
Been working on it all week. However, that nagging voice in my head says, "Maybe this is because she's only 10 days out of surgery and she'll rally in a few weeks..." How do I know?
cxmoody Apr 2021
I’m sorry. That STINKS.

Is your SM on hospice? My mom’s palliative care nurse handles that stuff for me now.
SeniorStruggles Apr 2021
No, she's not dying any time soon, best as we can tell.

Oddly, she keeps bemoaning the fact she has to "go through six more years of this!" Her mom lived until 87, and she's convinced she has to live precisely that long too.
Maple3044 Apr 2021
I would call the agency and request a different visiting nurse
Explain that the two of you just don't click, and you would like to have someone a bit more supportive.
SeniorStruggles Apr 2021
How would I figure out which agency she's from, since she's sent by the hospital that did the surgery? Do you know how? I don't.

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