Hello, I have and am a caregiver, and have been one for 8 years. As you know, along with the territory of care giving, there are families attached to those people. Lately, I am finding, that most families, really have no clue how to treat or talk to a caregiver, and there is not one specific rule. I feel that is because this (care giving), is not something that most families talk about, as it is or could be the one step away from death.
I am having issues with family members that let me know they want something one way, so I do it that way, then another family member comes in and says "why are you doing it that way", then I change, so then I try to get some chain of command, and basically in a nutshell, unless one person is running the situation, it becomes a communication nightmare.
Any ideas?
I have found that in my care giving search for clients, the one's that work out the best are one's where there is one client, and one or two siblings or people. When there are large families, it becomes very convoluted.
Regardless, I am finding that if anyone has any ideas on how to solve the issue of one client with a family of 5 people giving you five different directions. Then of course you have the person that needs the care giving, and what about them.
Any comments would be great.
I love what I do, I cherish my families, and know that I have been very blessed to have the compassion to step by step, one by one, make a difference.
Thank you fellow care givers!!! Have a great delightful day.
I'm a nurse who works for a large home healthcare company and your concern is fairly common. We've had caregivers call our office with similar complaints and our office tells them to ask for a written set of tasks the family would like the caregiver to complete by end of shift. This shows that you want to do a good job and that you're organized and the family is usually happy to oblige. Then when there's a contradiction you can refer to the list and the responsibility is put back on the family, not on you.
They're probably busy getting instructions from too many family members! Lol
I would add to the adage about dessert: "Life is short. Eat dessert FIRST!"
And it is a known fact that some foods are mood elevators.
We do get involved with families to a certain extent. We're in their home, sometimes for long periods of time (12 hour shifts). At times they confide in us, at times we watch personal, private scenes played out between family members and we feel like we're peeping in on someone's private business, which we are.
We advocate for our patients. We take care of them and their needs. Over the years I've had to put forth a conscious effort not to get personally involved with the family because we're the only ones in the picture that are expendable. We're the only person in the situation who can be fired. Family dynamics have a way of sucking us in, I think.
I think you're a very good caregiver and because you want to do your best for this patient I think you're very successful and talented at what you do.
I have read what everyone has said, and do know that in this world, I play a very important role for one woman. I will continue to focus on that and do, just what she asks.
I have asked her as we are talking in her hospital room about this and that, and the focus right now is her children, (who mean the world to her). I will print your answers out and keep them with me and simply remember that, as i assist her and very positively move throughout our/yours and my day, I believe that in life sometimes it takes a village, and with care giving, that village has help me certainly.
Really
When the patient is 78?
When the patient is living with the family?
Yes the funds come from the patient? but . . . after she has paid me, she gets hackled by her family (sadly enough), because in reality they want her money in the end and they do not want to see it go tot the caregiver.
So I try to do what yous ay, and I am very good about leaving everything behind, but it is hard during the 10 hour day.
I do the best I can.
The only remaining problem might be when the employer's instructions seem to conflict in some way with the welfare of your patient. If it's a major conflict, put your duty of care to your patient first and then immediately explain what has happened to your employer. If it's a minor problem, and it can wait a while, then ask your employer about it before you implement a change.
As for family maelstroms, backbiting, competition, feeding frenzies and the rest of the hideous jumble, I can only sympathise. These people should - SHOULD - appreciate that it is grotesquely unfair to involve you in their machinations. But if they had that much sense or even decent manners, they wouldn't be behaving so badly in the first place. Just stay away from them; and if you have any concerns about what they're up to, report at once to your employer.
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