My dad is in a wheelchair most times and staff often take the foot rests totally off the chair at various times. Well last week I noticed he had a metal one which wasn’t his and the black plastic one which is his. They had no idea where the other foot rest went. Mind you this was a new wheelchair in December. Then today I noticed the padded gel cushion we bought for it is missing. I am irritated that we will have to buy a new one when it’s not our fault it’s gone. Do nursing homes ever reimburse or purchase items that go missing through their own negligence?
Make sure your father’s name is on EVERYTHING. Use masking tape and permanent marker on his footrests. Also, don’t bring in irreplaceable items.
It just seems to me they should be responsible for his wheelchair items. I’ve talked to the care coordinator and sent an email to her, the DON and the administrator. Will see what they say. I can only fight so many battles but I’m getting tired of things disappearing.
I brought in a flashlight and low and behold, the eye glasses were leaning up on the side of the heavy duty cross legs under the hospital bed. No way anyone would see it without using a flashlight.
Usually nursing home/long-term-care do not reimburse a person for something lost. Too many times the patient misplaces it, or it gets wrapped up in a tissue and thrown out, or the person gives away the item to another resident in the facility.... [sigh]
I started taking Mom's clothing home to launder it myself, because:
1) The clothing kept disappearing - Mom was a large woman and her clothing was not cheap. A simple muu-muu nightgown in the style she liked could be $30 to replace.
2) I just couldn't stand the thought of her clothing being tossed into a communal hamper with other residents' soiled clothing - they kept these wheeled hampers in the hallways at all times, and all dirty bedding, clothing, etc all went into them. I don't know about you, but even if they are laundering them in hot water, etc - I don't want my mom's clothes in with someone else's that may have C-Diff or something else. And just the thought of someone else's waste getting on the clothes is just gross. They lose enough dignity being in a NH as it is - no need to make it worse.
Sometimes, the missing clothing would turn back up, no worse for wear. Sometimes it just never would re-appear at all. I never filed a claim for the missing items - I got tired of fighting the battle.
Losing prescription glasses or hearing aids is much more costly and replacing them is often difficult, although their small size make it easier to understand how it can happen.
Losing part from a wheelchair is a whole 'nother level of incompetence and I would insist on a door by door search. My mom's chair cost over $5K and her ROHO cushion almost $700, if something happened to it there is no excuse that would satisfy me.
If you wind up finding or buying new footrests, tie AND tape a heavy canvas bag with a drawstring to the wheelchair handle (with his name on it!) so they can put the footrests in the bag when he is being transported.
Are you talking directly to the SW and/or Administrator?
Barb, you are lucky. When they lost Moms glasses the first time at NH, they were going to call in the eye doctor and let Medicaid pay for them. I said no, lets find her glasses, they did. Never tried to get reimbursed for clothing. When she died, I was told anything in the laundry would be put at the nurses station when washed. I waited a week, went back, no clothes. They kept saying there wasn't any. Really, she had at least 10 prs of socks and a pair of slacks. All with their iron on tags. No, not worth making a big deal about. They could use them for another patient.
My mother's nursing home has occasional "laundry days" on which one can search through a stack of clothes and find missing items. Sometimes name tags fade or get torn off. My sister found a few of my mother's missing items by searching through the laundry stacks.
As has been suggested mark EVERYTHING ! Use a marker pen that cant be removed and put name in a not so obvious place on item. If you see something similiar ask staff to check out for name.
Keep in mind that the item may be out the door.
As for jewelry, when my Mom was in long-term-care, her watch and rings came home with me. Eventually I had to take my Mom's hearing aid home, too, as she kept taking if off and misplacing it. I made sure nothing of value was in Mom's room except for herself.
Too bad someone doesn't design a metal detector or scanner to catch items before clothing and linens are placed in the wash. Same for emptying trash. That would catch quite a few hearing aids, watches, eyeglasses, etc.
My aunt would take out her hearing aids & wrap them in kleenex & put them in a pocket so they went into the garbage because who checks used kleenexes - get big bulky hearing aids to avoid this issue - my grandfather [died in 1961] had hearing aids that were built into the arms of his glasses & they never got lost so look for that type if they wear glasses too
Oh as far as, hearing aids go. The company we got our hearing aids for my Mother from . Well they attached a (removable) wire and clamp to them . That we can just clip on her shirt. It wont stop them from being taken to laundry with cloths but at least you wont have to dig on floor , sheeting and trash.