Hi everyone. I am wondering what your experience has been with having Home Care? I am not looking for a specific company, but just wondering if you have found it overall more helpful or did it just cause more issues?
I hear some people say staff never showed up, stole medications or jewelry, or otherwise would show up and talk on their phone the whole time and leave without doing any of the needed tasks. Is this common?
The Home Care provider would be in the house with the elder, and nobody would be checking in or looking over their shoulder.
Thank you.
You’re SO right. There are exceptions (there are good ones). But many are drawn into that line of work, precisely because the elderly people are vulnerable: this is ideal for a thief…bad person…subtly demanding more money…or power-hungry person, someone who just enjoys being in a powerful position…power games.
The last 2 caregivers I hired had recently completed the CNA certification and were waiting for Nursing school to begin. These 2, a young man, he happened to be a Veteran and a young lady were nothing short of amazing. They were kind and gentle with my husband and very respectful to him as well.
So if you do want to hire privately I suggest you contact your Community College and ask if they have a CNA program and find out if there are a few students that have completed the program that might be interested in working privately.
I can guarantee that there will be a few that would want to work with 1 person rather than in a facility.
Now that she is gone I wonder if there was anything different that would have resulted in a different outcome.
Please know that agency aids want the most regular hours possible so if you want a few hours here and there, it will be much more challenging than if you want someone 3-4 days a week for a minimum of 4 hours p/day.
Right now I have 2 cousins aiding my remaining Aunt (104) in her home in FL. One is paid in cash, the other does it out of the goodness of her heart. This is sheer good fortune to be able to have this arrangement.
My MIL is in LTC in a very excellent facility on Medicaid (in a private room for some mysterious reason). This has also been an awesome experience. It is a faith-based organization that has operated NHs in our region for a very long time. They see it as a mission, and fund it as such so that even if one is private paying, it is more affordable than most good places.
My own Mother is 94 and lives semi-independently next door to me. She still drives and shops and cooks. She is single and I'm her only. But we have an agreement that the minute she is unsafe to be in her home - or - I'm overwhelmed by her needs, she will be transitioned to the same facility where my MIL is. My Mom is not thrilled by this prospect but she saw the ugly reality of trying to care for dependent elders with not enough time, money and help so she accepts this agreement.
I would opt to find a companion for my Mom through an agency or even privately before that happened, now that I have experience with it. But employee turnover is a problem nowadays, and privately hired people can be even flakier than agency ones (but at least with agencies there is accountability and the prospect of background checking, providing subs at the last minute, as well as relief from tax withholding burdens).
Any arrangement can work if the resources and circumstances allow, but usually no arrangement lasts forever since elder needs are constantly changing.
My youngest son works as a recreation leader in 1 of these facilities. He worked in at least 10-12 other facilities, and he tells me what is going on there. Right now, they all wear 95 masks, take a guess why? I am keeping my 93-year-old mom at home. Remove all valuables and money from home. That is a must. Some caregivers are actually pretty good. Just do not demand too much from them. There are some issues with no show. Yes, it is frustrating, however a good agency makes an extra effort to send a substitute.
I am thinking of a well-known agency currently that has been in business for 20 years. I actually do not believe quality of care has much to do with the company, but instead has more to do with the individual but was thinking an Agency would perhaps do a better job of background checks or have insurance.
Interesting comment about background checks only showing 'convictions' because it leaves a lot of unknowns about situations where there was no proof and no cases brought through the legal system. So, I suppose you accept that unknown regardless of whether you go through an Agency or hire independently. Ugh. It is hard leading a vulnerable senior to such an unknown arrangement.
I anticipate I would remove all valuables from sight, and have a "task list" in clear view of things a caregiver is requested to do routinely during each visit and use it like a check-list. Not sure that is bulletproof, but at least would start there.
Thank you.
The stress level was off the charts because you knew that at any time the phone would ring and another situation will have come up that needs to be dealt with. On top of all of that, 24/7 home care is far more expensive than a facility. And if you hire private help, you are supposed to withhold at least Social Security and Medicare, unless you pay under the table.
Just go to a facility. You will be so much happier. We did home care for 2 years, and there is nothing on God's green Earth that would ever convince us to do that again.
Hiring through an agency
Hiring privately.
Both have advantages and disadvantages.
Background checks will show CONVICTIONS it will not show anything if there was no court case where a person was found guilty.
When hiring either through an agency or privately you have to be watchful, you have to set boundaries and you have to be detailed about what you expect and it should be in writing what the employee (caregiver) is expected to do. If things are not done address it immediately.
And remember these are people that are working for you they are not your friend. That said treat them with respect, thank them for what they are doing (if they are doing what they should be doing)
We had some trouble with private caregivers, but some of them were good: we found them by word of mouth, interviewed them. Again, there’s no guarantee they’re good people.
I recommend private caregivers. Usually, you’ll get better quality than using an agency. We always hired a team of caregivers who rotated: there was never a no show.