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The Home Caregiver’s Guide to Coping
With the Hospitalization of Your Loved One
As a caregiver, one of the most
stressful things you may experience is the
hospitalization of your loved one, especially if the
hospitalization is in an intensive care unit. As an
intensive care unit nurse for many years, I have had the
opportunity to work with many families in this
situation. Your stresses will be different than the
person who is admitted after a sudden event like a heart
attack or car accident. The purpose of this article is
to help you cope with the unique feelings you experience
when confronted with the hospitalization of your loved
one.
Be prepared. Keep a list of your loved one’s medications
and allergies handy at all times. Include the name of
the medication, the dosage, the number of doses taken
daily and the times at which they are taken. Most of you
probably do this anyway. Make multiple copies on a copy
machine or your computer. That way you can give a copy
to the caregivers at the hospital. That saves them from
writing everything down again, and you don’t risk losing
your only copy. Although the ideal situation is for the
hospital caregivers to be able to share this information
with each other, the reality is that in many hospitals
you will be asked the same questions over and over. If
you have a computer, you can make this list easily and
update it frequently.
Set up a climate of trust with the nurses and doctors.
You are the expert on the intricacies of care of your
loved one, but the doctors and nurses have experience
caring for a wide range of people. You should expect
respect for your knowledge of the details of your loved
one’s medical history, but you need to expect that
things will be done differently than you do them at
home. You are caring for one person and know all about
what works best for him or her. Even in an intensive
care unit, nurses usually have two patients to care for
and must set priorities to meet the complex needs of
both of them. If you want to perform some of your loved
one’s care yourself, negotiate this with the nurses.
They can advise you if it will be possible for you to do
so, given the different equipment and differences in
your loved one’s condition than when you are at home. If
they decline your assistance, don’t be offended.
Sometimes nurses need to observe critically ill patients
for their reaction to the seemingly smallest activity.
Try to be patient. The first few hours of being admitted
to the hospital, or transferred to a new unit in the
hospital are stressful for everyone. The nurses and
doctors need time to assess your loved one, and to get
to know him or her. Frequently, a number of activities
must be performed in rapid succession. They can
certainly benefit from information you can provide, but
try to do it when they are ready. Anticipate this need
to get to know your loved one. They will not be able to
give you information about your loved one’s condition
until they have completed their assessments and
examinations.
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