Sunday, July 12, 2015
Resident Rights vs. Human Rights
Just about every nursing facility has a list of "Resident Rights." This is a list of rights that any person that lives in a nursing home should be able to voice at any time and that the facility and all of its employees must follow at any given time. These lists are all fine and dandy in theory, but what are not posted or communicated are the list of human rights that one has to give up once they become a resident in a nursing facility or any of the consequences that will be faced by employees for violating a resident's rights. Below is a list of resident rights posted at the facility in which I live. I have color-coded the 31 items to reflect how many of them have been violated in my own treatment in the last six months (in red), how many I have seen violated in the treatment of other residents in the facility in the last six months (in blue), and the number of rights that have been violated on others as well as myself (in blue with bold font).
Resident's Rights
Every resident living at Chandler Health & Rehab has the right to:
1. Exercise their civil and religious liberties.
2. Be informed of their rights, privileges and rules and regulations of the nursing facility.
3. Be informed of the bed reservation policy for a hospital visit.
4. Be informed of services available and the costs associated with those services including those charges not covered under Medicaid, Medicare, or VA and the basic per diem rate.
5. Be informed of their health status, including diagnosis, prognosis, significant changes and planned treatments.
6. Participate in or refuse to participate in any treatment.
7. Issue advance directives such as Durable Power of Attorney and Living Wills.
8. Receive a prompt response to all responsible requests and inquiries.
9. Be transferred or discharged only after a 30 day written notice for medical reasons, the welfare of other residents, and/or for nonpayment.
10. Be encouraged to establish their rights as a resident, file complaints and suggestions without fear of retaliation.
11. Receive appropriate healthcare, medical treatment, and protective support services.
12. Be treated at all times courteously, fairly, and with the fullest measure of dignity.
13. Manage their personal finances, if possible or if delegated, to receive an accounting of every month upon request.
14. Be free from verbal, psychological, physical, and sexual abuse as well as financial exploitation.
15. Refuse to serve as a medical research subject.
16. Have their personal, financial, and medical records treated as confidential.
17. Be treated with consideration and respectfulness of their personal privacy.
18. Refuse to perform work.
19. Receive personal mail unopened.
20. Take part in various activities of the nursing facility.
21. Have their own clothing and possessions as space allows.
22. Use tobacco products in accordance with facility policies.
23. Consume alcoholic beverages with physician’s orders and oversight.
24. Have privacy for visits with their spouses. Spouses who are residents in the same facility are permitted to share a room unless one of their physicians documents reasons why such an arrangement would have an adverse effect on the health status of either resident.
25. Have their choice of pharmacy and physician.
26. Have the opportunity, at reasonable hours, to visit with family, friends and clergy in private.
27. Retire and rise as they choose.
28. Be free from physical and chemical restraints unless medically prescribed.
29. Review and/or have photocopies of their records made by the facility and name those individuals to whom records may be distributed to.
30. Have access to a public telephone and have their conversation in private.
31. Have a copy of these Resident’s rights prior to or at the time of admission.
Wednesday, May 13, 2015
Live and Let Die
"Welcome to Laurelton, we are so happy to have you come live with us."
It was one of the first things said to me after gracing the doorstep of the nursing facility that would become my abode for the unforeseeable future. Unfortunately, the phrase was a bit of a misnomer.
The nursing home is not where you come to live, it is where you come to die. I do not mean to sound melodramatic or harsh, but very few people that come into an institutionalized situation such as the one I found myself in on December 7, 2006 ever leave that facility or the nursing home system. There is a part of the building in which I live (notice that I choose not to call it home, because that word implies that it is a place of comfort and reverence) that is a rehabilitation and physical therapy center in which people are only present for stays of short duration, for the most part an enormous percentage of the residents will live here until they are either carried out on a stretcher in a body bag or will leave for the hospital and never come back alive. It is merely a way station between abandonment by one's family and one's eventual demise.
I could not even allow myself for a second to imagine that situation for my life. How could I imagine living another three or four decades surrounded by octogenarians who had lost their grip on reality and been reduced to shells of the people they had been when they contributed to both their families and society. How could my dreams be reduced from grandeur, success, and accomplishment to merely the simple fantasy of an extravagant dinner rather than the bland sustenance that graced the black and scarlet meal trays that left the kitchen three times a day.
My original plans were to finish my bachelors degree, write the Great American novel (making myself instantly famous and wealthy), and then leave this godforsaken place in lieu of a beach house in Mexico where I would have a militia of beautiful Mexican women take care of me for the rest of my days while drinking nothing but spirits with umbrellas in the glass. I had forced myself to give up on the dream of recovery from my injuries. I had given up on the dream of a cure for paralysis. I had no disillusion that my family would ever come to their senses and come back to rescue me from the hell that I was facing. My stepfather had made it oppressively clear over the past decade that not only was I not welcomed in my own home along with those that shared my genetic makeup, but he was under the guise that I was the sole reason his life had not led to riches, happiness, and success. I was gladly biopsied from the family that he now claimed as his own under the firm belief that I was the sole malignancy in the life he had always pictured in his dreams. I was nothing more to him than a source of income that he had dried up and, therefore, I was of no longer use to him or HIS family. So he sold the rest of his family on the idea that the situation had called for me to be discarded. It took a decade of constant bombardment of these views to finally tenderize the heart and minds of my bloodline to accept, but that is the situation that led me to the prison that I now faced.
My only solace came in the evenings when I could pull a blanket over my head then daydream. Those dreams were constructed of reliving an ever-growing cavalcade of timelines of my life if allowed to return to the fully functioning body I once had 15 minutes before I fell off the balcony forever dooming me to a life that led to my current imprisonment and reliving the previous 10 years as a constructive member of the able-bodied world. This was my only entertainment and perhaps the sole function that that kept my sanity intact. The few instances that I would find myself alone on the back porch of my stockade and would hear the not so distant sound of the train whistle I would long for the ability to slip from the gray walls and linoleum of my captors to find a place to park on the train tracks and await an impact that would free me from this reality.
I had not come to a nursing home to live, I had come to a prison that would contain my body and suppress my soul until a miracle would free me or death would come compassionately calling. I have not had caregivers that nurture and take care of me. I have had underpaid and overworked corrections officers that have taken out there frustrations upon myself and my fellow prisoners. I did not come here to live, but barring a miracle this is where I will die.
It was one of the first things said to me after gracing the doorstep of the nursing facility that would become my abode for the unforeseeable future. Unfortunately, the phrase was a bit of a misnomer.
The nursing home is not where you come to live, it is where you come to die. I do not mean to sound melodramatic or harsh, but very few people that come into an institutionalized situation such as the one I found myself in on December 7, 2006 ever leave that facility or the nursing home system. There is a part of the building in which I live (notice that I choose not to call it home, because that word implies that it is a place of comfort and reverence) that is a rehabilitation and physical therapy center in which people are only present for stays of short duration, for the most part an enormous percentage of the residents will live here until they are either carried out on a stretcher in a body bag or will leave for the hospital and never come back alive. It is merely a way station between abandonment by one's family and one's eventual demise.
I could not even allow myself for a second to imagine that situation for my life. How could I imagine living another three or four decades surrounded by octogenarians who had lost their grip on reality and been reduced to shells of the people they had been when they contributed to both their families and society. How could my dreams be reduced from grandeur, success, and accomplishment to merely the simple fantasy of an extravagant dinner rather than the bland sustenance that graced the black and scarlet meal trays that left the kitchen three times a day.
My original plans were to finish my bachelors degree, write the Great American novel (making myself instantly famous and wealthy), and then leave this godforsaken place in lieu of a beach house in Mexico where I would have a militia of beautiful Mexican women take care of me for the rest of my days while drinking nothing but spirits with umbrellas in the glass. I had forced myself to give up on the dream of recovery from my injuries. I had given up on the dream of a cure for paralysis. I had no disillusion that my family would ever come to their senses and come back to rescue me from the hell that I was facing. My stepfather had made it oppressively clear over the past decade that not only was I not welcomed in my own home along with those that shared my genetic makeup, but he was under the guise that I was the sole reason his life had not led to riches, happiness, and success. I was gladly biopsied from the family that he now claimed as his own under the firm belief that I was the sole malignancy in the life he had always pictured in his dreams. I was nothing more to him than a source of income that he had dried up and, therefore, I was of no longer use to him or HIS family. So he sold the rest of his family on the idea that the situation had called for me to be discarded. It took a decade of constant bombardment of these views to finally tenderize the heart and minds of my bloodline to accept, but that is the situation that led me to the prison that I now faced.
My only solace came in the evenings when I could pull a blanket over my head then daydream. Those dreams were constructed of reliving an ever-growing cavalcade of timelines of my life if allowed to return to the fully functioning body I once had 15 minutes before I fell off the balcony forever dooming me to a life that led to my current imprisonment and reliving the previous 10 years as a constructive member of the able-bodied world. This was my only entertainment and perhaps the sole function that that kept my sanity intact. The few instances that I would find myself alone on the back porch of my stockade and would hear the not so distant sound of the train whistle I would long for the ability to slip from the gray walls and linoleum of my captors to find a place to park on the train tracks and await an impact that would free me from this reality.
I had not come to a nursing home to live, I had come to a prison that would contain my body and suppress my soul until a miracle would free me or death would come compassionately calling. I have not had caregivers that nurture and take care of me. I have had underpaid and overworked corrections officers that have taken out there frustrations upon myself and my fellow prisoners. I did not come here to live, but barring a miracle this is where I will die.
Thursday, April 2, 2015
Not a Typical CNA, an Example of a Good One
When I entered into the nursing home system on December 7, 2006, I was
going through a gambit of emotions. I felt as if I had just been abandoned by
my family. I had been removed from the community that I was not only
comfortable in and been unable to run around freely for a decade, but was full
of friends and had served as my most valued support system. Being forced into a
nursing home is one of the most feared predicaments for anyone with an
extensive physical disability. I was entering an alien environment which I had
feared since my injury and that was full of the types of people that I had been
extremely phobic about since being confined to a wheelchair (anyone with a
diminished mental capacity). And I would have to get used to a completely
different and random cavalcade of caregivers. To say the least, I was mortified
at the prospects of my new situation.
One of those issues, getting used to different caregivers, continues to be
a challenge in my life due to the rapid turnover rate in employees at my
facility. But the very first day I came into the nursing home I was matched up
with a very – let's say unique – CNA that we will call Jane Doe. She is big,
loud, over-the-top, and unapologetically inappropriate. But, once one has a
chance to break through her tough outer shell of her personality, she has a
tender heart and generous soul. But on that first night it certainly did not
seem so. You see, I am a man of routine and habit. It was not so before my
injury, but it is a necessity when it comes to regulating and controlling my
care. I spent more than three months in the hospital after my injury, over two
months of which were at a physical rehabilitation center. There was no
disputing that at this rehab center the focus was not on trying to help me gain
ground on the amount of control I had on my body. That ship had sailed. I have
a complete spinal cord injury which means that my spinal cord was severed
completely and that there was no hope of ever regaining any of the function or
nerves below my collarbones. So, while I was at this rehab center I was to
learn every minute detail of how to perform my care so that I could direct
others into doing so for the rest of my life. I had to direct every caregiver
how to stretch my limbs and digits every day. I had to explain exactly how to
give me sponge baths so that I will not get wet enough that my body temperature
might drop drastically and beg caregivers not to bathe so hard on my shoulders
or collarbones due to those body parts being where I begin to have sensation
and are very sensitive to touch. I have a system for rolling me in bed from
side to side that not only is comfortable to me, but was designed by physical
therapists to be the least strenuous on the person rolling me. Brushing my
teeth and washing my face should always be done at least twice a day for two
minutes, as my dentist insisted, and there is a thousand other different other
systems of routine that I had been having my caregivers perform for 11 years.
Not only was this the best way of taking care of me, it was all I knew about my
care and all I had to offer to the person taking care of me other than a
promenade of "thank yous", "pleases", and other expressions
of gratitude. These routines sometimes clash with the routines of many CNAs and
become a struggle of wills between us. Jane Doe was no exception from these
battles.
Jane Doe and I were the same age but we had very different life paths.
Whereas I was a wild young person yet responsible enough to stay away from
teenage pregnancy and able to get a good education. Jane had children at an early
age without much participation from the father(s) and had doomed herself to a
life of backbreaking work and meager salary. After I got used to her and she to
I, we were like peas and carrots. We were fast friends and each serves as the
other's emotional punching bag to this day. Although we do not get to see each
other very often these days because she left my facility to work at another and
only works at my facility on a PRN basis, I still consider her a close friend
and hope she feels the same way about me, which makes the following even more
difficult to write.
Burnout in direct care employees has become a major research area for me in
the past three years. Not only is it a subject that I research in journals or
textbooks, but it is something that I witness with great regularity in the
facility that I unfortunately have to call home. As a matter of fact, a partner
and I have performed inservices with nursing homes on how to prevent, treat,
and recognize burnout in CNAs, the effects of burnout, and specifically how it
impacts quality of care in nursing homes (our website on these issues and more
can be located HERE).
Jane is a perfect example of burnout. She has a tumultuous home life. She
is a single mother of four and, at the age of 39, is a grandmother by one of
her teenage children. She spends quite a lot of time taking care of the
grandchild while Jane's daughter (and mother of the child) does everything from
jumping from miniscule part time job to part time job always at fast food
restaurants to going out with her friends as if she has no responsibilities as
a mother. The teenager is a high school dropout. Jane's other teenager, a boy,
is in trouble on a constant basis with the law and has been expelled from the
school bus due to fighting and leaving Jane scrambling for ways to get him back
and forth to school before he drops out or is expelled. Her next child, also a
boy, seems to find great amusement in the behavior of his older brother and
Jane is plagued by the thoughts that he will follow the same path. On the work
front, Jane works a full-time, 40 hour a week job as a CNA from 7 AM – 3 PM in
one nursing home then four or five days a week she drives 45 minutes to an hour
to another nursing home where she works until 11 PM and then drives 45 minutes
to her home. What little bit of social life she had disappeared when she became
a grandmother causing her to see no social or romantic relationship
opportunities. The few men that she has had relationships with are quickly
chased away because she cannot spare the time to show them the attention that
they crave or receive from Jane. She is physically exhausted from morning to
night every day. She has a very short fuse and is irritable at both work and
home. After over a decade in the medical field she feels as if she is not doing
a good job anymore. She has a pessimistic attitude in nearly every situation
that arises. And finally, even though she works as much as 70 hours a week or
more, she struggles to put food on the table for her family every night and is
heavily in debt due to high rent, medical bills, and automobile payments.
Luckily, Jane realized that she needed some sort of psychological and
therapeutic intervention before she had a nervous breakdown or even worse. What
finally drove her to seek out therapy was when she realized that she could go
from jocular laughter to depression and tears on the turn of a dime. Her
insurance would only pay for a single, one hour visit to a psychiatrist once a
month (which she was still having to pay for more than half the therapist's
fees). The doctor, which Jane readily describes as inattentive and preoccupied
with things other than care, simply prescribed her a cocktail of
antidepressants. Each month she visited he would listen to her for around 15
minutes of a one hour session and up her meds. At this point she is so
overmedicated that she cannot sleep and rarely eats.
Wednesday, March 11, 2015
I Got Caught in a Trap That I Never Saw Coming
In a moment of weakness that preceded this visit by nearly 10 months I called my mother and stepfather into my bedroom where I lay motionless on a hospital bed. After nearly 11 years of having my self-esteem torn down by the ones who were supposed to care for me the most, I gave in. I do not remember the exact words, but I told them that I would go into a facility if it met two standards; 1) that there were people like me there and 2) I could come and go as I please. By the phrase, "people like me," I meant people who had suffered injuries similar to my spinal cord injury that left me motionless below the collarbones at age 19 but 100% aware of the world around me. I meant relatively young people, those that had complete cognitive awareness and could express it, no octogenarians that had lost their minds years before, no one relying on machines for each breath and pump of the heart, and I definitely did not want to be surrounded by vegetables. I had come across a multitude of these people throughout my years confined to a sip and puff wheelchair. These poor people that are pushed around by their parents through malls and at ball games were like magnets to a person in a chair that could actually converse. They sit there with emotionless stares as mom and dad speak for them in childlike voices. Call me a snob or an asshole, but just because life trapped me in a wheelchair it did not make me the goodwill ambassador for all things handicapped.
Do not get me wrong, I never once acted as if I was being imposed upon by the rubberneckers that had to know every detail of my life from injury to bowel program and all points in between. On the contrary, I bent over backwards to cater to every one of these people because I knew of the terrible pain that they suffer every day. How could I ever deny a middle-aged mother with tears in her eyes as she described a car accident or fall that froze her child's brain in a constant state of neutral? I always have stories of hope and grandeur tucked away between the folds of my mind just waiting to tantalize the slightest glimmer of belief she might have for a more positive future for her and her beloved child. But I do not want to live my life surrounded by every still life model of catatonia.
But I did say it. I said I would go if my standards were met. Yet as soon as I said it the words were already forgotten by me – but they were not by my parents. Months went by and there was not as much as a word about going into a facility. October rolled around and I went to a new neurosurgeon at the University of Alabama in Birmingham because the pain of the hundreds of pieces of bone, four titanium plates, 25 screws, and six bone grafts that made up my cervical spine had come to a point where something had to be done. I would not spend my life a slave of opioids to dull the pain as my father had been, but perhaps there was something that could be done. After a couple MRIs, x-rays, and CAT scans the surgeon came back to my exam room with the news that something had to be done and immediately. He claimed the next bump I hit on the red brick roads of the University I attended could be my last. My spine could just collapse causing me to suffocate.
To tell the truth, a majority of my consciousness hoped that this was the opportunity to check out on an outlandishly miserable existence. Perhaps the surgery, which was being performed on the 11th anniversary of the injury that ruined my life, was a godsend. No such luck. Even with a high probability of losing my capacity to breathe on my own (which would automatically call for the doctor to turn off the ventilator after three days per my living will) I came out of the four surgeries and 14 hours on the operating table with my only major problem being fluid that had settled in my lungs. After a few days I was even able to get up in my wheelchair and roll down to the cafeteria with a friend to pick out my dinner. But something was wrong, my neck was stable and gave me very little pain, after a few days my lungs cleared up, but why was I still in the hospital? After the dozenth or so time I asked my surgeon he told me that my parents were shopping me around to nursing homes without my knowledge. I was devastated. Luckily they were having no success due to my young age and extreme level of disability. So after another week I went home to the hospital bed in my home. I felt content that there was no way I was going into any type of facility and I prepared to return to my studies towards a BA in English/Creative Writing.
Just a handful of days later my stepfather asked me to go for a ride with him. He did not mention where until we were in the van on the way to a nursing home about 20 minutes away from my hometown. He said he wanted me to give it a chance. I should keep an open mind. I could feel the hair standing up on the back of my neck signifying that my blood pressure was climbing. This would have to be one state-of-the-art and active place full of twentysomethings and college students hell-bent on living independently and contributing to society.
We entered the lobby of the facility to the open arms of an administrator that stuttered his way through an introduction. He called over a female coworker in a pantsuit to give me the tour of the place. As I left the carpeted office space in my tires squeaked on the linoleum floors I passed by woman after woman in scrubs going from room to room while talking far too loud. I could not help myself from looking in every open door. Each dimly lit room hid its own little horrors. In one room may be a man drooling his pudding down on a bib obviously designed for a two-year-old and another so dimly lit that all visible to the naked eye were two emaciated legs bent up in the air. As I turned and traveled down one of the long halls of the warehouse I was violently struck by the bounty of unique, rancid aromas that I would soon learn to be the bouquet of dozens of elderly people all sharing the effects of laxatives. The smells were only compounded by the wet floors caused by traffic in and out of the cold, rainy day.
I had absolutely no intention of spending one single solitary minute in this place than absolutely necessary, but patiently waited out the tour. I felt as if a diver struggling for a breath of freedom by the time we reached the carpet once again – only to find the administrator and my stepfather shaking hands and stuffing away signed documents into folders. In a moment of weakness just days after my injury I had given my stepfather power of attorney so that he could handle my affairs and he used that power of attorney to imprison me. There was nothing I could do. It did not matter how much I protested, the die was cast.
There are many dates that stand out in my mind, but few are as regrettable as December 7, 2006. Just a few days after I had toured a facility that represented every nightmarish probability that my life lead me down, I entered Room 221 as the youngest resident in the facility. Perhaps the most disturbing part of the emotional roller coaster was how ecstatic my parents, my sister, and my brother were to have me move out of the home that I had helped design just a few years earlier. Soon my family would sell all of my furniture and collectibles at a yard sale using my room as a storage bin for their bicycles until they sold the entire house and moved out of the only hometown I had ever known. I did not leave my bed for several days, and when I did I was nearly brought to tears by the multitude of roommates that lined the halls and nurses' desks. Most of them were just shells of the people they had been when they were my age and the few that were a bit cognizant of what was going on would constantly reach out for me as I passed. The only people that were sane, the employees, walked by me from the right and left staring at me from toe to head yet not saying a word. Hell had just begun.
Sunday, January 25, 2015
Autonomic Dysreflexia, Mark it Down, Could Very Well Be My Demise
It is the bane of my existence and perhaps the most
dangerous medical condition that affects those with spinal cord injuries – autonomic
dysreflexia. If bodily functions are monitored and maintained properly it can hardly
an issue, but as you will find out in this blog, it can be life-threatening if
not treated as the emergency that it truly can be.
Autonomic dysreflexia (AD) is a malfunction of the autonomic
nervous system brought on by a pain sensation where a person with a spinal cord
injury has no sensation. It is mainly caused by episodes in which a urinary
catheter becomes blocked causing the bladder to distend to abnormal sizes and
triggering full on AD characteristics. AD can also be brought on by bowel
obstruction or impaction, hemorrhoids, or a number of painful stimuli that
attack the body. The main characteristics of AD are an extreme pararoxsymal
hypertension (an extreme and sudden onset of abnormally high blood pressure),
profuse sweating from head to toe, low pulse rate, flushing of the skin, and
(due to high blood pressure) a headache that is indescribably intense and
overwhelming.
After years of having an indwelling Foley catheter and the
constant urinary tract infections that go along with them, I suffer from bouts
of AD on almost a weekly basis. There are rare instances where the effects of this
malady are caused by bowel obstruction or even passing kidney stones, but the
most often culprit of these attacks is from sediment produced by my kidneys
clogging my catheter and “backing up the plumbing.”
Within 20 minutes there is a risk of stroke and/or heart
attack and with each second that passes during these attacks one’s blood
pleasure continues to climb. Needless to say, the faster a resolution is found
to this situation the better. AD can be overcome by nothing more than a simple
flushing of the catheter with sterile saline to unblock the clog of sediment
or, in many cases, the changing of the Foley catheter. Unfortunately, autonomic
dysreflexia is not a common occurrence in nursing homes, so the knowledge of
how to solve this issue is not widely known by medical staff.
Just to jump out of the flow for a second, I would like to
describe my rehabilitation. After spending nearly 6 weeks in an ICU in
Montgomery, Alabama I was shipped to Lakeshore Rehabilitation Hospital near
Birmingham. There were no illusions to what I would be doing at a physical
rehab hospital, I would not be rising to my feet after a couple of weeks of
physical therapy to defy the odds and walk out of the facility on my own
volition. It was pounded into my brain over and over that I was a “complete
injury,” which meant that my spinal cord was severed at the third cervical
vertebrae and thus I would never regain sensation or use of the muscles below
my collarbones ever again. I was to spend the next 8 to 10 weeks learning how
to teach others how to take care of me. I had to learn each step in the process
of doing my range of motion every day to prevent the atrophy of the muscles
that I could not use starting at the pinky finger and covering every muscle
down to my pinky toes. I had to learn how to talk a complete novice through the
steps of bathing my body, emptying my catheter bag, transferring me from the
bed to the wheelchair, and every other minute step necessary to keep me
healthy. And yes, autonomic dysreflexia and quad coughing were most definitely
part of the curriculum I had to pore over daily. One of the main
responsibilities I face is making sure that I can not only communicate this
information to those responsible for my care, but that they understand me and
can perform the steps necessary. With this said, I continue…
Just as it is important for me to know how to describe the
intricate steps in relieving my body from the effects of AD, it is absolutely
essential that the medical staff realize with what immediacy the situation must
be dealt. That is not always reality living in a nursing facility.
A most recent occurrence that I can describe has to do with
the nursing staff completely disregarding my directions and pleas for a relief
of my distended bladder from a blocked catheter. When nurses start at the
facility they spend three days in orientation. During this period they learn
the ropes of whatever set they are placed on and the rules and regulations of
the facility as well as abiding by the rules set forth by the state of Alabama.
These orientees are extremely common due to the turnover rate in my facility.
When a nurse is on orientation I make sure to introduce myself. I also try to
find out as much information about them as possible. I am not being nosy, but
if you can remember that a certain person has two daughters, two shih tzus, or
has worked with someone familiar to you it can absolutely build a bond between
the two of you.
When the most recent nurse that works the weekend night
shifts was in orientation I made sure to cozy up to her and make conversation
as often as possible while she was going through orientation. Although she was
quite close lipped for the most part, I did find out that she had been a nurse
for more than 30 years and had worked nearly every position a nurse could face
with the exception of a nursing home. I took her standoffishness as just a
personality quirk, but I had no idea how incredibly close minded and inept she
would become until her second weekend working after orientation.
I happened to be sound asleep when I was awoken by sweat
pouring into my ears and down the sides of my face. As soon as I became awake
and lucid I struck into action. I hit my call light and within 15 minutes a CNA
had answered it. I told her that my catheter was blocked and that I was already
in the throes of autonomic dysreflexia with my blood pressure already out of
hand. I asked her to please ask the nurse to flush my catheter. After 25-30
minutes the CNA returned when I again had to hit my call light. She informed me
that the nurse said she was busy and she would get to me when she could.
“Please, please let her know what is going on (the CNA was
no stranger to this situation) and the necessity to get this unclogged as soon
as possible,” I begged.
After another 30 minutes I begged the CNA to get the other
nurse that works on my unit to come and if she was occupied to please page the
house supervisor, I was desperate for assistance. At this point my head began
pounding with every heartbeat that flow through my body. For years I suffered
from migraines, but a blood pressure headache is five times the strength of a
migraine. My left bicep was causing my arm to flail around in front of me and I
had long since sweat completely through my comforter.
Finally, after another 20 or 30 minutes the nurse came in
empty-handed. I begged her to grab a 60 cc syringe and sterile saline to blast through
the obstruction in the line. She looked at me cynically and reached down and
picked up the tube that ran from my urinary catheter to the catheter bag that
hung from the side of the bed.
“The back has urine in it, so it is not blocked,” she said
with an impatient groan.
“I am sorry, but you cannot tell if the catheter is flowing
by looking at the urine in the bag,” I responded. “That is like looking at a
puddle in the street and saying that it is raining. That may not be so, it
could have rained 15 minutes ago or three days ago. That urine could have been
in there for six hours, but there is one thing that I do know and that is that
my catheter is blocked.”
“How can you tell?”
“My blood pressure is through the roof causing me to sweat
profusely and my head is pounding unmercifully,” I responded.
At this point she told me that there is no way for one to
tell when their blood pressure is high and that she would not flush my
catheter. I swore to her that this happens all the time and that I am
accustomed to recognizing the symptoms of AD and that I was perilously close to
having a stroke or heart attack due to the height of my blood pressure. Her
solution was to have someone take my blood pressure despite my pleas for
assistance.
Of course, in a nursing home of the caliber I reside in it
took a massive hunt for another half hour before anyone found a blood pressure
cuff. They took my blood pressure again and again until I finally asked what
number they were getting. Every time they took my blood pressure the systolic
number was over 210 and diastolic was over 150. They could not believe how high
it was said they kept taking it over and over.
Finally, the other nurse from the unit (who had been
distracted in the room of another patient going through medical distress) came
into the room and simply said that I was correct and that if the new nurse
would just listen to me that I know what I am talking about and that I know my
body. Another 15 minutes or so and a syringe and saline were found. Before
flushing my catheter the CNA emptied the bed bag completely. Once the nurse
flushed saline up my catheter and dislodged the sediment a urine stream came
gushing out into the bag and over 850 mL flowed out of my bladder.
The nurse came in a few minutes later with blood pressure
medicine for me to take. I refused. Within five minutes of relieving the issue
my blood pressure was normal, the sweat stopped pouring, and my headache
disappeared. Yet when I told her this she became belligerent believing that I
was intentionally disagreeing with her to make her look bad. I told her that
taking the blood pressure medication would bottom out my pressure and cause me
to pass out. She argued and argued with me – even trying to dump the pills in
my mouth while I was speaking to her. Finally the CNA took my blood pressure
and it was a normal 110/70. The nurse left the room in disgust.
This is but a single incident with this one nurse where I
have been left in a position of extreme AD for up to and exceeding an hour.
Excuses vary from not being able to come because she was making out the
schedule for the CNAs, because she was in the middle of a medication pass and
was not allowed to leave her cart (which is not true), or simply no excuse at
all – just without empathy, scruples, or morals.
This issue is a constant one. Not only do nurses not
understand the significant danger that autonomic dysreflexia poses, when they
are reprimanded for not acting with haste they develop a grudge against the
resident and become even more dysfunctional.
I have said it numerous times to the unit supervising nurse,
Director of Nursing, and administrator of the facility that one day this would
be my demise. Somehow they do not seem so sympathetic.
Excerpts from the following Wikipedia page is being used in
this blog entry. The page on autonomic dysreflexia and can be found at the
following URL:
Sunday, January 11, 2015
A Line in the Sand
Although I have spent eight years as a resident of the same
nursing home, it was only early summer in 2014 where I had finally reached a
point where I was no longer willing to bend when it came to my care. After a seemingly
endless parade of events where I felt as if I had been treated unfairly and
unsafely by the direct care staff, I drew a line in the sand and told myself, “No
more.” This entry is about that decision and how it has changed my life.
The nursing home industry may be powered by direct care
workers (clinical nursing assistants, nurses, etc.), it may be run by the
administrators and owners, it may be regulated by state and federal agencies,
but it is most definitely funded by the residents. We may not be signing our
names on the checks of every CNA that wields a bedpan, but be not misled – the
cash comes from the clients.
I lay in my bed one evening thinking about this. Thinking of
when I became a resident and how the nursing home slowly drained every penny I
had in savings and now takes my entire SSDI check each month only giving me $30
to spend. I thought about the hundreds of thousands of dollars that the
institution had received through Medicaid and Medicare on my behalf yet does
not even provide me with simple necessities such as underwear or decent razors.
All of this money that is funneling into the pockets of every person on salary
and each worker that punches the clock and yet I was constantly being forced
into compromising my own wishes of how to be treated by each employee. Three
shifts a day I had to cater my needs to malcontents who were stuck in their
ways and had no regard for my wishes or how I wanted to be treated. “That is
it!” I told myself. “This is going to change right now.”
My decision was to communicate to each person that entered
my abode that, whether I like it or not, they are in my home and I would not
accept being treated as if any less. When they hit that clock they are no
longer in control of me. When they agree to accept payment for taking care of
me they will do so the way I choose in my home. I will no longer bend over
backwards to coddle their sensitivities and that their preferences no longer
outweigh my own.
Do not get me wrong, I am a very compassionate person. I
have every sympathy in the world for the incredibly difficult job that these
men and women do day in and day out, but when it comes down to it that
continues to be their choice to work here. They chose this job. Saying this, most
of these workers are not only my salvation and lifelines, but they have become
my friends and family over the years. I know their husbands and wives,
children, birthdays, and life stories. Not only are they the people that bathe
me, dressed me, and feed me, but they are also my social stratosphere and in
many respects most of my entertainment. I value each and every person that
takes care of me and try to express that to them every chance I get. But do not
let these familial feelings usurp the main purpose of each of our roles. I am
here because I require a level of care far beyond a normal, able-bodied person
and they are here because they made the life decision that they would provide
this care as their occupation. Unfortunately for most of nursing facilities
these lines of hierarchy have been totally blurred. I had allowed it to happen
in the way that I allowed people to treat me and I was ready for it to stop.
My day was inundated with comments such as, “I will when I
get a chance,” “Give me a few minutes,” and “That is not the way that I want to
do it.” Every time I would hear these excuses I was left wanting and needing
something. Sometimes these things would be important and sometimes they would
not, but it is the responsibility of the employee to take care of the resident.
If I were in their home I would not expect them to humor my preferences. I
would most certainly expect to have a completely different set of rules in that
instance. But that is not the case. However humble it is, this is my home and I
deserve to be treated to my level of expectations. For instance, I would not
expect to be treated any more favorably than my fellow resident and I would
certainly not want to take valuable attention away from someone that is in
distress and in more a need of immediate care than I, but no more waiting for
two hours for a drink of water, no more suffering through painful spasms or
serious medical issues while a CNA hides in a mentally disabled person’s room
watching game shows. No longer would I allow myself to be a victim of apathy
and lethargy.
I spent an entire day going from office to office in the
facility spouting my new manifesto. I talked to the unit supervisor, the
director of nursing, and a multitude of nurses and CNAs, and I even went to the
administrator of the facility to tell him exactly how I had drawn a line in the
sand and would no longer allow anyone to brush it away for more lackadaisical
behavior. After years in a place that I would rather meet my friends in the
back parking lot rather than letting them see how I have to live my life and
would always respond with the name of my hometown when asked where I was from
by new acquaintances. This is my home and I am staking a claim on it and
assuming possession.
It has been nearly 8 months since I made that decision. I
have not veered away from it in the slightest. It is only in the last couple of
months that I have really seen results. Most of the changes have been because
of the rapid turnover rate of staff. It is much easier to tell someone on their
first day of work exactly how I want them to roll me in bed to put on my
clothes or to never mix any of the portions of food on my plate together. It is
far easier to communicate to a nurse that, even though I am paralyzed below the
collarbones and have no movement of my limbs, that I know my body and I know
when something is going wrong with it. It could lead to much more jubilant life
if I only had to deal with nurses and CNAs who are making their first voyage
into the world of skilled nursing care as my caretakers. I wish I could say the
same about many of the employees that have spent more time as direct care workers.
Many seem to be single-minded in their approach and insist on relying on
routine and old but consistent ways of doing things. I feel as if I am stubborn
enough to continue to insist on being treated as a fully cognitive and (some
might say) intelligent man of nearly 40 years of experience on the planet that
I might even be able to transform the way each of the residents in the nursing
home get treated. After all, I could not live with myself if I knew that I was
being treated well at the detriment of my fellow residents.
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