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RespiteMatch.com Health Blog

News, Opinions and Advice regarding the U.S. Home Health Care Industry

Home Care

September 19th, 2006 by RespiteMatch.com

Glossary
Home care: A group of services that help people receive care at home when they are ill, disabled, recovering from illness or surgery, or dying.
Key Words
community care, home care, home support, palliative care, respite care, supportive care, telehealth, tele-home care

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Home care is a group of services that allows people with health problems to live as well and as independently as possible, in their own homes and communities. Home care designed to give caregivers a break is called respite care. Palliative care offers nursing care, home support and/or respite for people with a terminal illness and their families.

The care provided at home can come from a number of sources — family members, friends, neighbours, community volunteers, health professionals, paid care workers, government-run and volunteer-run community health and social services agencies and private care agencies. A new and growing source of home care is tele-home care or telehealth, which uses information and communication technologies to deliver patient care at home.

Most home care services are publicly funded but a growing proportion is paid for by private insurance plans, charitable organizations and by individuals out of their own pockets. Patients and families also bear the indirect costs of lost employment opportunities, lost wages, unpaid family labour as well as the psychological, social, physical and economic burdens.

Successful home care:

delays or eliminates the need for care in a hospital or long-term care institution
provides preventive medicine
assists in relieving caregiver stress
encourages a high degree of participation by the person receiving care
depends on an informal network of family and friend caregivers
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Types of Home Care Services

Professional Nursing and Therapeutic Services
Clinical or specific care provided by registered health care professionals

nursing care
physiotherapy
occupational therapy
speech therapy
social work
nutrition counselling
Medical Services

intravenous antibiotic therapy
home chemotherapy
dialysis
life support systems
ventilator assistance
tube feeding
Personal Care Services

One-on-one care provided by family members, home care workers, community volunteers
assistance with activities of daily living
assistance with personal hygiene
Support Services
A wide range of homemaking and personal support services provided by family members, friends, neighbours, government agencies, community agencies and organizations, private agencies and individuals.

homemaking
companionship services
volunteer visiting
transportation
meal programs delivered to the home
community dining
home maintenance
respite care
in-home respite — including overnight care
adult day programs — care away from home during working hours
institutional respite — the ill person stays for a weekend, a week or longer
Palliative care: home care for someone with a progressive, life-threatening illness
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Home Care in Canada
The demand for home care has skyrocketed, now that health care has moved from the hospital back into the home.

Seniors — the main recipients of home care — are living longer with chronic illnesses, disabilities and dementia. The current trend is for seniors to receive care at home instead of being placed in long-term care or chronic care institutions.

More and more people are receiving at home the kinds of care that used to be provided in hospitals.
acute care — for acute illness and recovery from surgery
chronic care — for chronic physical illness and functional disabilities
outpatient services — physiotherapy, occupational therapy, counselling
palliative care — for the terminally ill and dying
specialized medical services —chemotherapy, antibiotic intravenous therapy
technology-dependent care — home oxygen therapy, dialysis, respiratory therapy
This is a result of governments’ health and social services restructuring which has resulted in fewer hospital beds, shorter hospital stays, outpatient surgery and care as well as the release of chronically and mentally ill people into the community.

Families that traditionally provided care and assistance with the activities of daily living are now expected to provide a more sophisticated level of care and manage the various care services provided at home to family members.
Extra caregiving demands are being placed on families at a time when fewer women — the traditional family caregivers — are at home full-time to provide care.
Long-distance caregiving has become more prevalent now that family members live at greater distances from each other.
Finding good home care is a challenge.
There is no uniformity of service
Home care is not covered under the Canada Health Act. Home care in Canada is a patchwork quilt of programs and services managed by provincial and territorial governments and delivered by local, regional and municipal authorities. Each has its own definition of home care, its own menu of home care services, its own set of eligibility criteria and its own built-in time limits and/or funding limits for the provision of services.

The quality of care varies widely
There are no national standards for home care. Professional services delivered by doctors, nurses and other health care professionals are covered under the Canada Health Act and these professionals are governed by their regulatory bodies. However, personal care services which used to be supplied by trained nurses, are now handled by a variety of home care aides, attendants and home support workers who may have little or no formal training in health or home care work. Also, imposed time restraints can prevent care workers from fully attending to their clients’ needs.

Good help is hard to keep
Many home care workers earn little more than minimum wage, work irregular hours, often under difficult conditions and do not qualify for benefits. Yet they are being asked to perform increasingly complex tasks. Many workers leave home care for more lucrative employment in hospitals and long-term care institutions

Filed under: Home Health Care Advice |

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