Home Care Medicine
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Transcript Home Care Medicine
Home Care Medicine
MELISSA VOURLITIS, DO
MICHAEL BOWERSOX, MD
House Calls
“House calls” can be conducted at home, B&C, AL, RCFE.
Insurance coverage:
Medicare +/- secondary insurance
PPOs
HMOs (Arch health Partners, Scripps?, others?) *requires referral from
primary care physician.
Private pay occasionally can be accommodated.
House Calls
Benefits to the patient:
Patients are in their own environment, waiting for the doctor is much
easier.
“Home” environment can be evaluated for safety, other concerns.
Patients can have caregivers and family present at the appointment
more easily in order to coordinate care effectively.
Reduces patient anxiety and confusion.
Reduces hospital readmissions.
Enhances doctor:patient relationship.
PREPARING FOR A
MOBILE PROVIDER VISIT
NEW PATIENT
Demographics
Previous Medical Records/ Medications
Contact Information
Advance Directives
Forms to be completed
POLST
602-Physician’s Report for Admission
Any assessments already performed
Order pages
PREPARING FOR A
MOBILE PROVIDER VISIT
ESTABLISHED PATIENT
List of concerns
Vital signs < Temperature Pulse BP O2 sat% >
Medication list
Refills needed
Patient forms to complete
Contact Sheet
Orders to sign
Common Problems
Fall
Fever
Cough/SOB
Constipation
Nausea/Vomiting
Agitation
Urinary tract infection
POLST form is important when determining intervention.
How to report a concern:
Discuss with the physician the best method for communication:
Fax?
Email?
Phone?
Text?
Other?
Keep in mind that the nature of the problem will dictate the urgency of
transmitting information. Also, the time of day (or night) should be
considered.
How to report a concern:
OPQRST mnemonic:
O ~ Onset
P ~ Provocation/Palliation
Q ~ Quality/Quantity
R ~ Region/Radiation
S ~ Signs/Symptoms
T ~ Temporal
SBAR reporting system
S ~Situation
B ~Background
A ~Assessment
R ~ Recommendation
Common Problems
Fall
Serious consequences of a fall:
Uncontrolled bleeding.
Major fracture or fracture that may require surgery.
Deformity of limb.
Acute change in neurologic status.
Epidural hematoma: rapid deterioration soon after injury.
Subdural hematoma: symptoms may occurs hours to days after fall.
Patients with serious consequence of fall need urgent evaluation, 911
appropriate in most situations.
Common Problems
Other consequences of a fall:
Abrasions
Lacerations
Fractures, sprains, dislocations
Bleeding
What to do about this depends upon the severity of the situation.
Stitches and splinting must be done at an office or urgent care. Other
wound care can often be done at home.
Common Problems
Fever
Infectious Disease Society of America (2008) definition:
Single oral temp >100 F or 37.8 C (100.4 for non elderly residents).
Repeated oral temp >99 F.
Rectal temp >99.5 F.
Any single temp greater that 2 F over baseline.
Elderly people have a lower febrile response.
Serious, life-threatening illness can occur rapidly in elderly residents.
Common Problems
Cough/Shortness of Breath
Medical history important.
Asthma, emphysema, congestive heart failure, other?
Exertional symptoms or prandial symptoms versus symptoms at rest
Associated symptoms (edema, nausea, sweating, change in mentation)
Obtain basic vital signs, pulse and respiratory rate significant.
Pulse >100
Respiratory rate > 30
Fever?
Common Problems
Constipation
AVOID, AVOID, AVOID.
Monitor bowel habits, keep a log.
Review med list and ensure there is a prn medication available to use if
needed.
Intercede at first signs of change in bowel habits.
Call if standing orders are ineffective.
Common Problems
Vomiting/Diarrhea
When did it start?
Others with similar symptoms?
How many episodes?
Associated symptoms?
Severe symptoms or symptoms that do not resolve in 24 hours, need
medical attention.
In general: do not give food or drink for 2 hours after vomiting, trial of
sips of water. BRAT diet for 24 hours once tolerating PO, advance slowly.
Common Problems
Agitation
Review potential causes ~ Ask WHY? Agitation is usually the result of an
underlying, unrecognized problem:
Pain
Constipation
Urinary retention
Change in environment
Change in medication
Common Problems
Urinary Tract Infection.
Not all change in behavior is a UTI…Must have 1 and either A,B, or C, or
2.
1. Acute dysuria (painful urination). In males acute pain in testes.
And one of the following symptoms:
A. Suprapubic pain (lower abdominal pain)
B. Gross hematuria (bloody urine)
C. New or marked increase in one of the following: incontinence, urgency or
frequency.
OR
2. Fever with Costovertebral angle pain (back pain).
**If indwelling catheter, criteria changes.
SERVICES AVAILABLE FOR PATIENTS IN THE HOME
Urine testing
by physician
collected at home, delivered to lab for evaluation
Blood testing
collected at home by physician or mobile lab tech
evaluate for causes of fatigue
evaluate diabetic control
evaluate levels of certain medications
Mobile Diagnostic Services
Radiology Studies
Chest
Spine
Extremity
Echocardiogram
Electrocardiogram
Ultrasound
Abdomen
Breast
Thyroid
Pelvis
Evaluation for deep vein thrombosis
Evaluation for peripheral arterial disease
Other available services
Home Health Agencies Provide the following types of services:
Skilled Nursing/Wound Care Nurse
Physical Therapy
Occupational Therapy
Speech Therapy
Dietitian
Social Worker
Behavior Health Specialist (in some cases)
Home health aid, once skilled service has been identified.