Elder-caregivers
Related: About this forum"This Is My Life Now" -- An Interview with a Nursing Home Resident
I walked into the cheerful, rather narrow halls of the care center. It didnt smell of feces and urine like many I had been in. Up the hall from where I walked in, was a small dining room. Some of the residents were sitting there. I found out later that they were waiting for dinner. It was two in the afternoon. They dont eat until five thirty. Ill just wait, said one resident who sat in a wheel chair, watching people walking by. She called all the nurses by name. She had been here a while, I imagine.
I traveled down the hall to the room of my friend. She was lying in bed, reading a book. The room is small, two beds, two dressers and two nightstands in this room are a tight squeeze. My friend has many pictures of loved ones on the wall. I cant remember who they all are, so my daughter pasted those little name tags under each of the pictures. She explains. Her roommate is not so lucky. No pictures of loved ones adorn her walls. She has very few living relatives and none close.
I sit down to talk with my friend. How are you doing? ...
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I'm unsure how much of the article I can post here,
so you may continue at this link: https://caregiver.com/articles/nursing_home_interview/
PoindexterOglethorpe
(28,485 posts)The main complaint was a shortage of nurses, and that the nurses apparently weren't being paid very well. I bet the "nurses" are merely some sort of licensed care giver. RNs make very good money, and I can't imagine an RN would forego the wages paid at a hospital for the minimum paid in a nursing home.
MFM008
(20,042 posts)There was one.
One RN on duty for the ward.
They were usually dispensing meds.
Everyone else was hardly more qualified than me.
