Elder Care Information

5 Myths You Should Know Before Choosing Elder Care


Myths associated with selecting quality nursing home care suggest quick and easy ways to identify quality care. In fact, relying on these myths can lead to disastrous results. I have identified a few of the most common myths in hopes of helping you avoid some of the problems commonly found in many nursing homes.

1. The Smell Test

You've heard it repeatedly: "The best way to determine the quality of care a nursing home provides is to be alert to bad odors when you visit the home."

It seldom, if ever, works. Why? Nursing home administrators have heard the very same advice. As a result, they are particularly sensitive to unpleasant odors in any area that might receive visitors. Almost all will do their best to remove offensive odors as quickly as possible, even when it means avoiding their primary responsibility to their residents.

2. The Personal Recommendation

Recently, I heard a guest on a radio talk show state that the very best way to find great nursing home care is to get recommendations from a friend. Like other myths, there is a grain of truth here, but you must check whether your friend has had extensive interactions with the nursing home recommended. Often that is not the case.

Last weekend I dealt with an emergency call from Jim, a friend who had placed his mother in a nursing home recommended by a friend. Although she was recuperating from a stroke, no nurse or aide checked on her condition for more than 14 hours. Jim discovered her in the morning with many cuts and bruises, her bedsheets soaked in blood. He was astonished that anyone would recommend such a poor care facility.

"My friend said her grandmother was in this particular nursing home," he reported. "So, I thought it would be good care."

"How often does your friend visit her grandmother?" I asked him.

"I didn't think to ask," he responded.

"And did you check the latest survey for that nursing home?"

"No," he answered. "I thought a personal recommendation was all I needed."

Jim's mother is now back in an area hospital. No one knows yet how much damage this experience caused to her recovery.

3. You Get What You Pay For

Nowhere is this statement less applicable than in nursing home care. In fact, I'd replace it with another shibboleth -- "Buyer Beware." Our own research, encompassing more than 6000 nursing homes and more than 100 assisted living facilities shows no relationship between cost and quality of care. You may find quality care in an expensive facility, or you may not! Similarly, the fact that a facility is low-cost does not indicate whether you'll get poor, average, or quality care. You have to do your homework. Relying on price as the sole indicator of quality care can lead to disastrous results.

4. Adequate Staffing Equals Quality Care

A recent report by the Senate's Special Committee on Aging indicated that quality care for a single nursing home resident requires more than three hours each day of nursing and nursing aide time. However, statistical analysis of the latest federal database on nursing home deficiencies indicates no relationship between quality of care and staffing levels. This finding is consistent with a number of university studies.

What should you look for, then, in nursing home staffing levels?

There is a level below which nursing homes are so understaffed that quality care can not be provided. I'd suggest that you not consider any home providing a level less than two hours per day per resident. For levels greater than this, I'd focus not on the number of hours available for care but on the motivation of staff available to provide care. Those who are motivated to care for the elderly will do so. Those who are motivated only by a paycheck will probably provide shoddy care regardless of their numbers.

5. A Well-Known Chain Will Provide the Best Care

This is another myth that can lead to tragedy. Sometimes, well- known companies do provide top-quality care. In other instances, however, a quick review of newspapers and magazines will show you other companies with long records of legal troubles stemming from accusations of neglect and abuse. One such company has been sued simultaneously by several states' attorneys general.

How will you know? The company is not likely to tell you, so you won't know unless you take the time to look into the company's historical performance.

There you have it -- 5 myths exploded!

What does work? There is no substitute for your own personal investigation. With a little research, with personal visits to nursing homes before you sign anything, you can avoid many of the difficulties that have come to those who relied on such myths.

About The Author

Copyright 2002, Phyllis Staff. Phyllis Staff, Ph.D. - Phyllis Staff is an experimental psychologist and the CEO of The Best Is Yet.Net, and the author of How to Find Great Senior Housing: A Roadmap for Elders and Those Who Love Them (2002).

pando19@direcway.com


MORE RESOURCES:

Gerald Ensley: The people, not just the food, make Meals on Wheels ...
Tallahassee.com, FL - 17 hours ago
Elder Care Services, which operates the Meals on Wheels program, celebrated its 35th anniversary last week. The program delivers about 300 meals a day and ...


Alamance ElderCare presents Family Caregiver & Senior Resource fair
Burlington Times News, NC - May 13, 2008
Alamance ElderCare is presenting a free Family Caregiver & Senior Resource fair next week at St. Mark's Church, but people must register to attend. ...


Stafford: Elder-care benefit a boon to boomers
Kansas City Star, MO - Apr 30, 2008
Nearly half of the workers studied by MetLife reported spending an average of $273 a month in elder-care matters. Those facts, coupled with what ...


"Look, Ma, No Plan!" Elder Care Expo is Place to Start a Family ...
PR Web (press release), WA - May 8, 2008
No one likes to talk about elder care. Almost no one plans enough for getting older. And no one wants aging to happen to them. During Mother's Day weekend, ...


Elder Care: Letting Families Decide
Hartford Courant, United States - Apr 28, 2008
By GREG BORDONARO | Courant Staff Writer April 29, 2008 When Joe Neddermann's 84-year-old mother, Mary, fell and broke her collarbone two years ago, ...


Hot Property
Minneapolis Star Tribune, MN - May 11, 2008
Catholic Eldercare, which operates memory care, skilled-nursing care and assisted living facilities, is seeking City Council approval for 66 units of senior ...


Hands of Time; New solutions for elder care
Welland Tribune,  Canada - May 10, 2008
In a region with the highest population of seniors in Canada per capita, helping people who suffer from dementia is a significant challenge. ...


St. Martin's topping off new elder-care cottage project
Bizjournals.com, NC - Apr 18, 2008
Birmingham's St. Martin's in the Pines will top off its newest elder-care cottage homes today, which are said to be Alabama's first Green House ...


PEFCU sponsors elder care seminar
Journal and Courier, IN - May 7, 2008
The PEFCU Trust and Financial Center will sponsor a free, no-obligation elder care seminar at 6:30 pm on Thursday, May 22 at the Lafayette Country Club, ...


Elder care
WatertownDailyTimes.com,  United States - May 8, 2008
A federal pilot program making it possible for elderly Americans to use Medicaid funds to control their long-term health care at home offers an alternative ...

Elder-Care - Google News

home | site map
© 2006