The nursing home I'm considering sending my mom says there are some supplements they can't give, even with the doctor's prescription. Is this correct? How do I determine if they are just wanting simplicity or under the assumption they can't give the supplements when perhaps they can. What regulatory body would be the decider on this? She has been on supplements while I've been caring for her in my home. The nursing home has agreed to give her vitamin D and melatonin but are balking at some of the other supplements I've been giving her. Where can I find the definitive answer on if they are allowed by law or regulation to administer supplements? I was told that they can't give anything that isn't FDA approved, but I didn't think supplements required FDA approval. Yet they said they could give vitamin D for example. In addition, they were telling me if their pharmacy doesn't carry it, they can't give it. One of Mom's medications is specially compounded and not all pharmacies carry it. Can they refuse to administer a doctor-prescribed medication just because their pharmacy doesn't carry it? I'm not even sure who regulates this from the nursing home's perspective. FDA? HHS? Medicare? Though I will certainly pay for the supplements out of my own pocket, they said it is not a payment issue. Any help or direction would be appreciated.
All this is in the admissions agreement. You do not demand that they do xyz for your family member - all that does is cause problems. Once they are in a NH, there is a care plan meeting required to be done on a regular basis by CMS. For my mom in both of her NH, the first one was done within the first 30 days and then every 90 days thereafter. A letter was mailed as to the upcoming CPM and a # to call to set the exact time for the meeting. SOme I went to in person & some were done via CC. The CPM is where you can voice your concerns and request specific things be looked at -everybody front the various departments (dietary, activities, social work, nursing) will be there and will have a short report on your elders status for their department. CPM's are very insightful if you manage it right, and is very much a way to ensure what you want do is put into action. If something in serious, then the DON comes to the CPM otherwise the DON will send the RN who is the floor director or section manager for the unit your family member is in.
There is no reason why you cannot be totally prepared for the CPM with a list of items you want addressed and state why and what you suggest as a solution for them with documentation as to why (like a letter from their old MD that the specific supplements were given under their orders). When the CPM is done (takes under 30 minutes), you will be asked to sign off on having the meeting - at this point in time if you don';t agree then you add in what you want or you put clearly that the report you did and brought to the meeting was delivered and to be added to your elders chart. At my mom's first NH, the last CPM meeting I brought in a pretty scathing report with photos and wrote clearly on the CPM as per attached report and I would not leave the meeting till I got a copy of the CPM that had all the signatures of staff at the meeting. The DON was not happy, but this is totally within my rights as DPOA MPOA - I already had mom set up to move to a new NH later that month, so no blowback.I also filed a Stark complaint on this NH. If you have issues with a facility, you have to clearly document date & time on all this and then do the follow up in letters to CMS and your DHHS or whomever administers Medicaid for your state. All NH are state regulated and that body should also get your letter of concerns. Everything must be in writing with your authority indicated (DPOA, Guardian) and I would send all certified mail with return registered card (the green card @ USPO). Venting on this site is terrific but you have to do the follow up in writing and with a chain of verification to get things done.
To clarify and expand on some of the answers here in regards to supplements being a waste of time, On the contrary, other forms of alternative methods for making the elderly healthier should always be encouraged. The USA is a bit behind compared to the rest of the world when it comes to healing the body instead of just removing or alleviating symptoms. Doctors do not get their degrees to cure or reverse illness, they go to get Medical Degrees and learn specific remedies that ONLY stop symptoms, NOT cure or reverse because the curriculum and the courses are not designed to do that. They are designed only to treat body ailments and how to block body systems that cause the pain temporarily. The Medical institutions do not look at the CAUSE of an illness.
Supplements in ADDITION to implementing other systems of healing and alternative strategies, can definitely reverse what looks like Alzheimer’s or Dementia and even alleviate Parkinson’s symptoms. Medically trained doctors will attest to this when their own patience begin to go downhill and then begin to improve after using alternative strategies. Getting more hydration can stop the brain from shrinking and better sleep alone WITHOUT NIGH-TIME WAKING, can reduce dementia like symptoms by 75%. Eliminating UTI without antibiotics and by regularly giving cranberry WITHOUT SUGAR but with RAW honey, and giving probiotics DAILY and a list of other foods like certain fatty acids like coconut oil and fish oil. An example of how delicate the brain is would be the movie "Lorenzo's Oil" with Susan Sarandon. Lorenzo, their sons mind was deteriorating and the parents learned that a fatty acid in seeds and another oil could benefit. Sure enough it did. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lorenzo%27s_Oil
Food is what fuels the body and makes it work properly. FDA rules disqualify many methods of research which prevents obvious solutions to be considered a valid remedy. We know that water, and a small snack can stop a headache, but we don’t see this as a remedy promoted by anyone on TV. We only see an ad for Tylenol. The USA Is too young of a country to have enough experience at healing disease. We need to learn from cultures that have a more reliable history with healing the body and a track record of what has worked and is still working because these are known healing systems that have been passed down. They can not be proven in double blind studies because no one looking to make a profit will have anything to sell so the studies will not have any investors. Remember, all doctors of modern day have learned from regular people. All that was done is that institutions have created a system of STOPPING or REDUCING symptoms by using ONLY drug and have created course work for students on HOW to administer these drugs. In those institutions, it is NOT profitable to teach a student any curriculum that creates a practice that cures the physician’s patients otherwise there would be no patients coming back into the doctor’s office and no drugs to prescribe. There is no secret here. GO anywhere else in the world in more rural areas and there is no doctor yet the people know how to cure themselves, how to stitch up wounds and also hot to perform cataract surgery. Cataract surgery was learned in India.. same as so many other healing methods that are not taught in the
However, as pointed out above, the supplements must be available in single-dose form - such as blister pack. They cannot be taken out of an open bottle. It's a health and safety issue. (BTW - I am a registered nurse.)
They are not just safeguarding your elder, they are safeguarding other inmates--because many of those roam about, and pilfer things from other rooms, for instance. So nothing edible or meds can be left in the rooms.
If it's a supplement that's a pill/capsule, etc., Doc should be able to order it, and it would be dosed off the med.cart by the nurses, with regular med rounds.
IF the facility is telling you they aren't allowed, even if the Doc orders it?!
QUESTION THAT.
Look into how the rules actually are written--you may have to dig deep, and or, contact multiple agencies governing this, at the State level---because as others mentioned:
Corporations often lie, or, word things in ways to cover up what the situation really is....like: some store employees tell customers an item is not available anymore--can't be got....what they are really covering is: the chain store no longer carries that item, so wouldn't you be happy buying this other thing they do have?...
If it's a food supplement, such as "Boost" or another meal replacement shake or something, it might be that you could give her that when you are visiting, but not leave it there for the facility to give her.....
It's common for facilities--particularly chain operations, to Contract with corporations to provide certain Brands of things--like Ensure, for instance [just using that as an example only]. In those kinds of contracts, clauses can forbid the facility personnel from giving patients competing brands of similar products--so they just tell people they "can't give those, even if those are prescribed".
BUT...having worked in nursing homes, I can tell you there are Docs who DO prescribe supplements [even if they don't do it well, they are trying to help], like vitamins, minerals, even probiotics, CoQ10, etc., which ARE kept on the med cart, get dosed as ordered, at med rounds, or as-needed [PRN]....those have also included some meal replacement shakes in single-serving cartons or cans.
As long as stuff is not at the bedside/in rooms for anyone else to pilfer, as long as it is dosed properly as Doc orders it, by staff, from the med cart or med room, it should be do-able.
Unless that facility is under contract by some corporation that limits what they can do.
Can't imagine any State forbidding supplements. Just facilities or their personnel if they don't want to deal with extra stuff. I've met some of those, too.
As well as met some staff who pilfer the "extras".
One facility told me they discouraged supplements, because they knew those were expensive, and they didn't want families to get their hopes up unrealistically. They felt they were doing the families a good service, by limiting the dosing of nutritional supplements [costly], and preventing families building up hopes that those could cure or fix their elders conditions.
So many people are mal-nourished!
IF properly diagnosed for nutrients, they might get some serious relief of symptoms, just by getting proper nutrition. When there's, obesity, diseases....underneath that, is long-term poor nutrition, slowly compromising the body's ability to function, until it becomes a disease-state. We know so much most Docs don't use or deny, and need to know so much more!
Most nursing homes have their own Dr on staff who oversees all patient treatment unless they need to go outside for specialized treatment for such things as dialysis.
I do not know how dental treatment is provided but in my opinion a filling would be more palliative than an extraction.
Nursing homes vary in quality as many have observed so once again due diligence will get the best care for your loved ones. Visit at many different times of the day so you can see how your loved one is truly treated.
the whole subject of suppliments is a very thorny
You seem to be "my type of girl"
Sonny
I believe that it would be best if at all possible, is to take your loved one home and have the nurse and therapist come to your home rather than have the person locked up in an institution. I believe my wife died unnecessarily because of the neglect and all of the pills that were given to her under "doctors" orders. Her personal doctor was not allowed to interfere with the "institutions" doctor!
When people lived in their own homes, they assumed full responsibility for what meds and supplements they took. Once the NH assumes legal responsibility, they are going to expect full knowledge of everything that patient ingests.
Whoever is paying the BILL should be the one who says what supplements are given.
Usually, the state Department of Health is the regulatory body for LTC facilities. There is a federal law that governs state laws for LTC facilities, which is CFR 483, "Requirements for states and long term care facilities". It outlines the requirements that each state must enforce. Section 483.60 covers Pharmacy Services.
I worked in a LTC facility many years ago as a nursing administrator, and from what I remember about billing & medications & things, insurance/Medicaid pays for prescription medications & the LTC pays for anything else that is prescribed that is not covered by insurance/Medicaid. I don't know if that still applies. If it does, what they're telling you is just a cost-saving measure for them because they don't want to spend the money. Sometimes certain meds are not on their formulary, but they will find an appropriate substitute & request the physician's approval to substitute the medication for the one that was ordered. It's usually the cheapest option available. I don't know what the deal is with "supplements", though. I don't know what "supplements" you're talking about.
Why were you giving your mother the supplements? Did she have verified low levels of vitamins and/or minerals that she required them? Or were you giving them because you wanted to for no special reason? What result do you expect from the supplements? I'm not sure that at your mother's age & with Alzheimer's/dementia, all the supplements are necessary. The Alzheimer's/dementia likely won't improve, so why have her take all these extra supplements? Concentrate on having her live her life with the highest quality possible.
If one of the meds your mother is on is compounded at a specialty pharmacy & her doctor determines that it is necessary for her to take it, it is the responsibility of the LTC facility to get it. LTC facilities are usually contracted with a local pharmacy that services LTC facilities & other places, & they want to operate as cheaply as possible. If the pharmacy that the LTC facility your mother is in won't/can't compound the medication, then give the LTC facility the name of the pharmacy that compounds the medication & have the specialty pharmacy send it to the facility once a month or on a regular schedule. Or, you can fill/re-fill the prescription, pick it up & bring it to the LTC facility.
It angers me that LTC facilities spend so much money marketing themselves as these utopian places, with wonderful care & offering everything a person could ever want or need, and then when they get their hooks into you, it's all about doing it as cheaply as possible, despite how much they are getting from each person every month. The majority of LTC facilities are for-profit enterprises, and the owners/administrators take home a very tidy salary every year.