A senior is healing a bone in the hospital where some in room Physical Therapy has begun, we are now being told that no regular inpatient P.T> facility will accept because she does not yet have full weight bearing in the healing leg, so she must instead go to a nursing home, and this is what is still not being made clear to me, but it sounds as though all attempts at further rehab will be abandoned.
There are many nursing homes that also have rehab facilities within them. Choosing a facility like that might be in your mom's best interest, so that she doesn't have to move once she's there.
Let us know how your meeting goes!
Or, are they saying that your mother will not qualify for rehab at All? When you say " in my mother's state, what do you mean? Does she have advanced dementia?
If she can no longer understand instructions, or if she is combative when attempts at pt are made, they maybe saying Yat she would not benefit from PT.
Thank you for your input. By " her state " I only meant her mobility issue with the healing bone .
Not only is she cooperating , but I have been told by the nurses that she is even continuing to do the sitting exercises she has been shown by the P.T. during her daily
1 hour therapy , throughout the rest of the day on her own .
The thought of her being written off , if that is indeed what is happening , as she is so
eager to improve that she does the exercises on her own without even being told
breaks my heart .
I just pray that is not what is afoot right now and I will be sure to get the answers nailed down as the family is supposed to have a sit down conference with all staff involved either tomorrow or Tuesday .
Thank you again for your help
She will get much more PT, and probably OT, than she gets in the hospital. In my experience, duration of each varies from 1/2 hour to 3/4 of an hour. For anyone recovering from an injury, that's usually enough; much more would exhaust him/her.
BTW, in my experience hospitals refer to selected rehab facilities, and also recommend selected private duty and home health care agencies. I won't say there's favoritism, or partiality, but the discharge planners in my experience don't offer a wide range of choices for rehab.
I think during the care meeting you should clarify specifically why the facilities allegedly won't accept a nonweight bearing patient.
Your mom cannot go directly to rehab because she cannot yet do full on pt. The bone needs to heal, but she still requires nursing services?
That is what I am beginning to understand , but can you tell me if you know by " skilled care "
would that mean at least the level of Physical Therapy she is getting now in the hospital ?
Thank You