Home Health Care Nursing Information and Overview
Home
health care is allowing the patient and their family to maintain dignity
and independence. According to the National Association for Home Care,
there are more than 7 million individuals in the United States in need
of home health care nurse services because of acute illness, long term
health problems, permanent disability or terminal illness.
Home Health Care Basics
Nurses
practice in a number of venues: Hospital settings, nursing homes,
assisted living centers, and home health care. Home health care nursing
is a growing phenomenon as more patients and their families desire to
receive care in their homes. The history of home health care stems
from Public Health Nursing where public health nurses made home visits
to promote health education and provide treatment as part of community
outreach programs. Today academic programs train nurses in home care and
agencies place home health care nurses with ailing individuals and
their families depending on the nurse's experience and qualifications.
In many cases there is a shared relationship between the agency and the
academic institution.
Many changes have taken place in the area of
home health care. These include Medicare and Medicaid, and Long Term
Care insurance reimbursement and documentation. It is important for the
nurse and nursing agency to be aware of the many factors involved for
these rules and regulations resulting from these organizations.
Population and demographic changes are taking place as well. Baby
boomers approaching retirement and will present new challenges for the
home health care industry. Technology and medical care in hospitals has
lead to shorter inpatient stay and more at-home rehabilitation.
Increases in medical outpatient procedures are also taking place with
follow-up home care. This has resulted in the decrease of mortality rate
from these technologies and medical care has lead to increases in
morbidity and chronic illness that makes the need for home health care
nursing a greater priority.
Home Health Care Nurse Job Description
Through
an array of skills and experience, home health care nurses specialize
in a wide range of treatments; emotional support, education of patients
who are recovering from illnesses and injury for young children and
adults, to women who have experienced recent childbirth, to the elderly
who need palliative care for chronic illness.
A practicing nurse
must have the skills to provide care in a unique setting such as
someone's home. The nurse is working with the patient and the family and
must understand the communication skills for such dynamics. Rapport is
evident in all nursing positions, but working in a patient's own living
space needs a different level of skill and understanding. There is
autonomous decision making as the nurse is no longer working as a team
with other nurses in a structured environment, but is now as a member of
the "family" team. The host family has cultural values that are
important and are different for every patient and must be treated with
extreme sensitivity. Other skills include critical thinking,
coordination, assessment, communication, and documentation.
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