CAN YOU LEARN TO LOOK AFTER SOMEONE AT HOME WITH A TRACHEOSTOMY AND VENTILATOR?
CAN YOU LEARN TO LOOK AFTER SOMEONE AT HOME WITH A TRACHEOSTOMY AND VENTILATOR?
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In this week’s blog I want to talk about
“CAN YOU LEARN TO LOOK AFTER SOMEONE AT HOME WITH A TRACHEOSTOMY AND VENTILATOR?”
There aren’t many long-term ventilated adults& children with tracheostomies in the community in Australia, given that it’s currently such an under-resourced area.
Most long-term ventilated adults& children with tracheostomies stay in Intensive Care for far too long and unnecessarily. Therefore funding is being misallocated and is being used for expensive and unnecessary Intensive Care treatment that could be provided in a far more Patient, family and holistic care environment in the community!
The few long-term ventilated adults& children with tracheostomies that end up in the community do so after many months in Intensive Care or on a respiratory ward, only to find that nobody can look after them at home and the burden of looking after them is left with their families or with non- qualified and non- skilled carers.
This increases the burden for all parties involved.
Patients often end up going back to Intensive Care quite frequently because
1. Nobody is accountable to keep them out of Intensive Care
2. Nobody has the skills and knowledge to keep them out of ICU
3. The lack of quality control, i.e. Some carer agencies provide staff that are not qualified to look after ventilated Patients with tracheostomies in the home and are not qualified to do so
4. The lack of strong advocacy for long-term ventilated adults& children with tracheostomies- again their stay in Intensive Care is unnecessarily prolonged and hospitals and the health system is wasting hundreds of thousands of Dollars of tax payers money every month rather than looking at a more cost effective and Patient and family friendly alternative
It’s therefore that only accredited and qualified services such as INTENSIVE CARE AT HOME that work with skilled and qualified registered nurses who have ICU experience, can make a real difference in the quality of life for long term ventilated adults& children and their families.
Only the right skill set and the right mindset can get long-term ventilated adults& children with tracheostomies out of Intensive Care a lot quicker and provide them with the quality of life they really need and deserve!
There are no “cheap” solutions in order to get long-term ventilated adults& children with tracheostomies being discharged from Intensive Care into the community, but there are more cost effective solutions to provide home care for long-term ventilated adults& children with tracheostomies, compared to the $5,000 per day Intensive Care bed...
Continue reading at: https://intensivecareathome.com/can-you-learn-to-look-after-someone-at-home-with-a-tracheostomy-and-ventilator/
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