I was told by someone that the state of NJ is forcing removal of bed and wheelchair alarms in nursing homes. Supposedly, it violates a patient's right to be free from restraints. This is upsetting to me because Dad, age 96, is an end stage dementia patient and just last week his bed alarm prevented a fall. If anyone has any knowledge of this ruling, please let me know. Thanks!
I would talk directly to the nursing home about this ruling if it exists. Your dad's safety is your number one concern.
Two hospitals I have been in have used bed and chair alarms that go off like a fire alarm even if you just lift your butt up a couple of inches to reposition
Now I am of sound mind ( in my opinion anyway) so I find it quite handy to set the alarm off when they take too long to answer a call bell. That will usually bring at least three nurses running.
I live in NYS so don't know what the current thinking is here. The NH where I was sent for rehab did not have the alarms so I had to resort to calling the front desk on my cell to get some attention.
Of course we have the right to fall but do we have the right to expect someone else to put us back together??????????
I was not always a believer in the "no alarms" practice, and used a motion alarm at night on my father who had dementia. I used it to alert us that he was on the way to his bathroom so we could assist him. The noise was so irritating to him that he tried to hide it (the alarm) from us, and was able to say it bothered him.
As for other forms of restraint: by federal regulation, doctors orders and family requests are not sufficient reasons to restrain a resident.
I have many years of nursing experience with the elderly. The problems and solutions are not always clear-cut. Not all falls can be prevented. Even if a physical (or psychological) restraint keeps the person's body from injury, restraints are known to contribute to depression, pressure sores, incontinence, loss of physical functioning, isolation, constipation...
I do sympathize greatly with family members who want only the best for their loved ones. On the nursing side (and administrators and DONs), if family members CANNOT be persuaded on acceptable professional standards of practice, they often revert to telling them that regulations do not allow whatever practice.
Finally, when the "revolution" to eliminate physical restraints came about, many medical and nursing professionals were saying the same as now: "We have to let them fall??!!" Studies showed there was a small increase in falls, but no increase in injury. I would say to those of you who are pro-alarms: The facilities that are caring for your loved ones are demonstrating interest in providing care according to professional standards. Just think: if not for advances in medicine, we would have only penicillin to treat infections; patients would still be hospitalized for days for cataract removal.
My wish is this: that family members be open to discussion for the best treatment plan, and allow professionals to help. I am still in the profession, and want nothing more for my patients than for them to be safe and have a good quality of life, just as family members do.
See All Answers