The bill for the supplies, which is only for diapers, runs from $30 one month to $70 for another, then it would jump to $100. Now it went from $200 last month, to $560. My mom is able to walk and use the bathroom by herself. The diapers are used for leaks and I know from checking trash in her room that she is NOT using 30+ a day. She uses about 5-6 in a 24-hour period, which I know by being there two days in a row on many occasions without trash being taken out during that time period and being able to see what was still in the trash. At nighttime she gets up 2x and asks for assistance to walk to toilet.
I did verify the charges are for supplies only and voiced my concerns for the varying costs each month in the past, but I just got lip service stating my mom hides them in her room by the caregiver in charge of distribution. I still can't find any "hidden" in her room. She does hide other things, but I've never come across a diaper.
I would love ideas and suggestions on how to deal with her facility supervisor with this ongoing billing issue and where to perhaps purchase these on my own for her.
Just an update. I went in with my neatly arranged binder and asked about the concerning charge as compared to the past charges. At first I was told by the director it was for gloves, wipes, chucks, and diapers. I told her the numbers still don't make sense and my mom does not have 2 of those items in her room as I supply the wipes. Then I showed her the print outs of the various diaper companies (retail) with quantity and how that compares with her daily use of anywhere between 16 - 24 and it still does not come close to their charges. She agreed with me something wasn't right.
After she reviewed the facility caregivers product distribution report she found my mom was given 30 chucks (bed pads for night) every 2 days, 7 packs of wipes every 4 days, and 4 packs of diapers every 4 days. WHAT?
She was as shocked as I. So now all the memory care residents are going to be reviewed for careless product distribution and I am off the hook for the incontinence bill for the month.
So a huge thank you to all on this site for helping me understand this huge concern and arm me with the right info to deal with this.
Two bags not on sale only cost me $35. If your Mom plays with them then have them put them up high enough for her not to play with.
1. If an elder is in the NH w/Medicaid, who pays for the diapers?
2. If an elder in in the NH private pay (or with LTC insurance), the diapers are always a separate charge?
If Medicaid pays for diapers (as part of the pay't to the NH, and I don't know at all if this is the case, then what would stop the NH from saving some money by taking diapers from the private pay patients (as appears might be happening to some in this thread) to use on the Medicaid patients (or anyone else who runs out of diapers; could be another private pay patient)? I could see an unscrupulous NH doing this, hoping the person who pays the bills doesn't notice the extra charges (although I don't know how hundreds of extra dollars could get by unnoticed)?
If my mother ever ends up in a NH, she will be private pay (the LTC insurance checks are made out to her, not the NH). And now I find out I will have to be on the alert for diaper theft?
We pay enough $$$ for them to live there and then they steal from the residents!!!
Then do an accounting each time you visit so that you write date & time & number on box top or in a note book so that you are 'monitoring for her replacements' - let them see you do this a few times - end of story on overcharging I would think
I don't pay for my mom's as it is included so set fee for all that stuff
I do use an "overnight" for Rainman but often wonder why I do - if Rainman has an overnight accident he somehow manages to soak his sheets, comforter and sometimes even the pillows become casualties. Its truely amazing how he manages it - as the diaper is miraculously dry. One of the many mysteries of Autism?
You can't imagine how much I appreciate all of your advice and sharing of your similar situations. I realize this is unacceptable and since my mom really dislikes drinking water and has a rather low fluid input it shouldn't be such a ridiculous fee.
I am going to puchase myself now but.... sorry to sound needy here.... What brand(s) are recommended? She wears 24/7 mainly for leaking and overnights. I will purchase the pads as suggested as well as wipes and write her name on every package ( or every pad or diaper for that matter) .
Thank you again. I'm surely going to go in on Monday armed and ready. 😊
I always got my moms incontinence supplies at Costco. Depends, Poise Pads and baby wipes. The deposable pads for sitting/laying on I did have to buy at a regular grocery store.
Anyhoo - the baby wipes came nine packs to a box, 100 wipes per pack. One day I went to visit and found a note from the paid caregiver who spent a day with my mom once a week. Seems she had to go buy baby wipes for my mom as she was completely out. WTH? I had just recently brought in a case. Maybe I had my timeline messed up? Off to Costco for another case of wipes. Then it happens again - running out of wipes. So I go talk to the person in charge.
"Oh yes, Mrs. Rainmom - your mother has had a few bouts of diarrhea." Me- "But Mr. Director, my receipt shows I just bought these wipes x days ago. That means your staff - on average - is using 124 wipes a day on my mother. That's seems like a lot".
Now, myself? I am not trying to save the environment when it comes to cleaning up a poopy mess. So yes, it can take a lot of wipes. But no - not 124 a day. And not with Costco wipes which are 2" larger than the average and hands down the best wipes I've ever used.
So, I started writing my moms name on every package of wipes with a Sharpie. Problem solved. I think because my mom was always well stocked in supplies- she became the no-pay convenience store. I realize that isn't practical- putting a name of each diaper - but do what you can do to show the staff your monitoring the situation- I really believe it helps. They know you know...
Bottom line--it PAYS to say something because they'll take advantage of you otherwise!!
I don't know if you know the brand name of what the facility uses - but go on line and do some comp shopping. Even big brands like Depends make a variety of diapers that range in price - roughly $14 for their basic in a 18-20 pack up to over $1.00 per brief for their high-end fancier briefs.
Someone else mentioned the pad inserts. Do you know if these are currently being used? If so, that can up the price per, by half again as much.
If they have given you a price per diaper - this is all a mute point. But if they haven't - do your homework! If you can go into a meeting and cite price per diaper from a few different brands and then quality level within brands - to put it simple - they'll be less likely to "eff" with you once they realize you know exactly what your talking about.
Of final note - wipes. Is the price of wipes being factored? I mean $560 is completely insane, but the cost of wipes will slightly raise a per change price.
So go into this prepared and know your facts. Also bring in a complete incontinence billing history. And here's a tip: if you don't already have one - make up a big binder to take to the meeting. Fill it with paper and section dividers. Have it clearly labeled on the front and spin - something like "Mom - Brookside Nursing Home". Of course use the actual facility name. Put the bills and some notes under one divider. The other dividers can hold blank paper - for all they will know. They will take you more seriously if they believe you are documenting everything.
It shouldn't take more than 10 min to change your mother's diapers so they shouldn't be charging an excessive hourly rate for this. My mother is bedridden and has a medical condition that causes excessive urinary incontinence. I change her diapers frequently during the day, like every 1.5 hour to 2 hours. Each time is less than 5 min. At bedtime I insert a super plus booster pad (purchased from Amazon) into her super plus diaper (which holds 24 oz of urine, also purchased from Amazon); the booster pad holds an additional 12 to 16 oz of urine. Her overnight urine out is...3 liters...yes...3 liters! She doesn't wake-up in the middle of the night. She has a kidney condition that causes excessive urination. She can't tolerate a catheter because it causes ongoing UTIs. I would love to save money on diapers - but the catheter disrupts her quality of life so I won't allow this for her.
Unfortunately, overcharging is common in nursing homes/assisted living.
So the very next month's bill comes and it's $560! So I am thinking maybe the caregiver got upset that she was "fronted" off?
IDK.
I received some great ideas here and I'm going to go in and "innocently" ask about the high amount charged compared to the others and then show the breakdown that it would mean my mom is going through 30 - 40 diapers a day and either she has a medical condition the med staff has not been made aware of or me for that sake and her room's trash cans are so small they couldn't possibly hold that quantity. They only dump trash once a day.
I'm venting here too. Sorry. I'm just thinking of other facts I can present to them during our conversation next week. Any suggestions would be great.
I know the price can vary by brand but on average adult diapers come in packs of 20 that can range typically from $10-$20 a pack. Doing the math that's roughly 18 diapers a day for the $560 month. Seriously?
I think I would arm myself with some figures and talk to whomever is in charge. Tell them you want a breakdown by day for a couple of months. Maybe look all wide eyed and innocent and say "Gosh! If mom is using 18 diapers a day I really out to get her to a urologist. Could you keep track how many she uses a day for a month so I know what to tell the doctor?"
Or better yet - buy and take in your moms supplies. Costco sells a box of Depends - 4pk for a total of 80 diapers for about $48.