I am a nursing assistant in a nursing home.
I recently manually transferred a patient from bed to wheelchair by hand (which I know is unsafe and illegal but that’s how we do it here) and I almost dropped her. The brakes on the wheelchair were broken. So when I attempted to place her in the chair, the chair kept moving.
If I would have been a little weaker or the patient a little heavier I might have dropped her, her hip might have broken etc.
I spoke to another woman about this. One brake on her husband’s wheelchair is broken. She said she made several complaints to the staff with no results.
I contacted the department of health and I asked that I remain anonymous.
My manager spoke to me today and said that he knows that I made this complaint. He explained to me that I must be loyal to the nursing home and never make a complaint to the health department but rather come to him and he will be happy to take care of it. He added that he had not heard any complaints from the woman I mentioned.
Does anyone have any opinion about this?
However this was really cutting corners too far in my opinion. I understand we all want a luxury car and vacations in Europe, however I think this manager needed a kick in the butt. Or a new career.
You should not do the transfers, or say you cant bc you hurt your back and need help or use the Hoyer. Or what if you refuse on the grounds of safety?
Maintenance should be able to fix the wheel chairs to make it safe for staff. I dont know why they cant? I've seen them put wheel chairs out of commission and use others. I didnt see them fix it, but I know the wheel chairs came back fixed. Eventually. Might take a week. They should take care of that. Can you talk to the charge nurse, or call someone from maintenance? That's their job. It's usually not a hard fix either.
I can guarentee you if the elderly person falls you will be written up and responsible. And if they break anything bc their bones are like tissue paper, the families and bosses will blame you.
Tell the charge nurse/supervisor you cant bc there are no brakes on the wheel chair. Cant use it.
Usually nursing homes have rules about moving residents, and asking for help is allowed. Or chart pt is too unsteady and falls risk today. They have to report when a resident falls. They dont want falls.
I dont understand why they dont let you get help?
Ive had training where they tell you to slowly lower/brace the person to the ground. 100-150lbs of anything will fall quickly, not in sloooo-moooo. (Like they pretend) And then add in a tissue paper frail adult. I cant hold 100lbs up and guide it to the floor slowly as its falling away from me. Even with a gait belt. Try it sometime. Not as easy as it seems. This happens in a split second. Add in a person who has dementia. They could decide they are 6yrs old and going to go to the ice cream truck in their mind. You never know.
I also heard of a well respected PT dropping a very frail 93yr old while doing pt. That day she just collapsed. He had worked with her for weeks. Family was in an uproar. Like he did it on purpose? No. He was distraught over it as was everyone. People can get dizzy and faint. They can also get equilibrium /inner ear problems out of nowhere. She broke her hip. It was an accident. They do happen. I can guarentee you elderly pts get unpredictable.
I saw an elderly gent get up and lock himself in the bathroom and fell. They got a key after that. No one had ever done that b4! He was in PT/OT waiting for transport back to his rm. He could walk short distances.
My dad fell mult times out of bed. He forgot and thought he could walk. Muscles to frail to walk. He actually fractured his skull while in a very big hospital. They werent even going to tell me. No one was around when he did it. He also rolled out of bed sev times. It happens. Not everyone automatically at fault, or didnt care. I dont think nursing staff wants fractures and death on their conscience. Most people dont.
If they continue to hassle you about the quick transfers, refuse to fix the wheel chairs. I'd have to find a place that will help the workers and get the wheel chairs fixed. They should have extras on standbye. I dont know why they dont. Sometimes even PT or OT will fix if if they want to. Depends on how they are personally. They could make the phone call if you cant. You should be able to, but depends on the site culture. I could have told my boss in recreation svs and she would do it. I could pick up oh and call.
If your manager is that crappy and cant be concerned with safety issues, I'd RUN. Dont understand why they cant fix a wh. chair?
If your DON and facilities director do not appear to be working on the problem, report to the appropriate facilities outside your place of employment. Good record keeping of event, and person reported to will help with investigations and will help protect/prove retaliation from your employer if needed.
Good luck and always just do the right thing.
Allow me to tell you what happened to me when I reported neglectful "care" of my Mom and harassment of my Dad and myself when we'd visit her.
I reported a gross event of neglect to the Department of Health and with the Office of Health Care Workers AFTER raising many concerns about my Mom's care, previously.
The nursing home staff LIED to the DOH nurse, who was investigating the case - said they had to call the police on me for disturbing the other residents. The DOH nurse dropped the case.
Also, the nursing home went to my sibling (who had health proxy), lied to him and got him to agree with the nursing him to ban me from the nursing home unless I signed an agreement which limited my visiting time with my Mom and that I could not take her off the floor. ( this sibling rarely visited and was resigned entrust Mom's care to this facility without question).
My Mom died July 15th. The nursing home staff did not alert my Dad she was in the last stages. We would have removed her into a hospice situation where she would be properly cared for and have family around her. She died in a hospital gown covered by a thin sheet and alone.
I had tried to contact grassroots organizations and legal services prior to this - but because I do not have POA - was told there was nothing they could do.
That is what happened, in my case. I've since heard of similar experiences.
If you have any suggestions of what I can do to effectively report the nursing facility, please let me know.
Thank You.
While it's true that your manager might have been told the same thing you were told - I refuse to do the wrong thing. I reported when there was falsifying about the county monies and how they were being spent. I lost my job but I kept my integrity. Later the person who was lying lost her 43 yr old husband while we found the cancer in my 80 yr old husband and he lived another 26.5 years.
Lying and falsifying records is wrong. If you have no integrity, what is left?
However, be very aware that sometimes doing the right thing has bad consequences. Like losing your job. I was fired at Christmas but my then 75 yr old DH was wanting me to be home with him - so I quit working at the age of 45 to be with my hubby and never looked back. Not everyone can afford to do that.
Good luck to you.
You contact your supervisor if there is a problem.
If the problem continues or gets worse then a call to the State Regulatory Agency or the Ombudsman would be the place to start. Local Health Departments do not typically inspect Nursing Homes other than inspections they would do for Kitchen and any Food Service area, Water testing if the facility is on a Well. the facility is licensed by the State and they would be the ones to follow up on any complaint. The only other time the Local or County Health Department might be involve is when there is and outbreak of a communicable disease TB, Scabies, Bed Bugs (I know they are not a communicable disease but they are a nuisance), Noro Virus or other Food Borne Illness.
I know that ultimately no one has come up with the PERFECT answer, the one that will work now and in the future, but sure do appreciate the thread of this discussion with so many thoughts incoming. Hope you will keep posting to the forum things you see, things you think about, things that should be food for thought for those of us who have people we love in the care of others.
Do not record your info in anyway that would violate HIPPA rules. If you make notes that you intend to keep for yourself (in case you can't access email), then use code name for patient and do not mention specific health issues. Something like Granny Jane, requires wheelchair for all movement, brakes broken, reported xx day, xx time, email to John Doe.
If staff suffer an injury on the job, it is a worker's comp claim. If the resident is injured, it warrants an incident report to the state which can be turned into a complaint. The facilities don't like either of those, so why not fix the darn wheelchair and transfer residents according to their care plan. UGGGG!
As far as the danger: I know that there is a lot of danger at nursing homes - especially to patients who do not get visitors often - and even with that (I went every single day), my mother was severely injured. I kept telling the nursing staff and hospice that Mom was not connecting with me - that she had changed. I asked for a UTI test for 4 days and they refused to do it - I should have been more persistent. They didn't notice the change, but I did! It wasn't a UTI (found that out in the ER), but her dementia had worsened. She attempted to get up in the middle of the night without her walker - she used to know better than that - anyway, she fell and got a 2" gash on her forehead, all the skin ripped off her left shoulder, broke her right hand and skinned both knees. This was at 2:30 in the morning according to her roommate (who had a stroke, partially paralyzed but mental capacity is there). The roommate yelled for help & turned her light on - no one came. The resident across the hall heard the commotion so called the nursing home on their outside line and tried nursing station to nursing station until she got someone to answer. My Mom laid there bleeding for an hour before anyone responded. Where was the 24 hour care? I was told to call our ombudsman and they would address the problem. I moved Mom to another home. The ombudsman said they couldn't do anything because I had moved Mom and she was no longer there. So I went to the head of the resident counsel (the same one who called the nursing home to help Mom in the middle of the night) and she was going to talk to the ombudsman about it. My Mom never recovered from that fall - it was too much for her and she passed within six months. Probably should have called an attorney.
Keep in mind that many nursing homes are getting sold to large corporations who cut the staff to a minimum for the mighty profit dollar - there's big money to be made from the baby boomers coming to those homes...
I do realize that the nurses aides are overwhelmed - always too many patients and most nurses will not assist them - they stand and stare at their computer most of the day, some working and some not. But where were they for an hour?
the way I see it is if you decide to go the route of the nursing homes request, that you not call anyone on any patient issues, or patients concerns, just bring the issue to them directly, you are agreeing to keep any and all illegal and possibly life threatening issues that could have a horrible outcome if not reported.
maybe I am wrong but to me that makes you a partner in crime with the nursing home.
you sound like a caring person who only wants the best for the patients but the nursing home rules is to keep it within the nursing home only. I would look for a new job. check out the homes and find one that you feel comfortable with to work in.
better to be safe than sorry if something goes wrong.....
My Mom is in nursing care. I appreciate your sharing....