Preparation is the key to recovering at home after a surgery.
Unfortunately, patients often underestimate the types of support and services
they may need in order to enjoy a more pain- and stress-free recovery. This is
especially true for patients who live alone or whose spouses work and will be
gone for the majority of the daytime hours.
From mobility aids and other medical equipment to post
surgical home nursing and meal provisions - taking a broad-spectrum
approach to your preparation will ensure you have exactly what you need as you
need it. If nothing else, preparing a "just in case" contacts list
will allow you or a helper to contact medical equipment supply companies or an
in-home nursing care provider if it turns out your road to recovery is more
rocky than originally anticipated.
4 Tips for Post-Surgical Recovery At Home
The following tips will help you prepare for a home recovery.
1. Quiz Your Doctor Thoroughly. Even the most
well-meaning doctors get so used to the post-recovery speech that they don't go
into as much detail as you need. Also, if they assume you have someone at home
to help out, they might not be as emphatic about some of the more challenging
aspects of recovery.
- Make sure your doctor and nurses are aware you live alone, or that you'll be alone for the bulk of the day. Ask detailed questions, like:
- Will there be dressings to change? If so, can you reach them easily on your own? --How groggy will the pain meds make you?
- What are some of the side effects of the pain medications you'll be prescribed?
- Are there food or drinks you should/shouldn't eat?
- Will it be difficult for you to observe routine hygiene habits?
- What do you foresee my greatest recovery challenge(s) to be?
2. Talk to Your Insurance Company. You may find recovery will
require short-term use of medical equipment or mobility aids. Some type of post
surgical home nursing or caregiving may be recommended, especially if
you require more complicated wound dressing, IV
therapy or medication management. Often, these types of assistance are
covered - or partially covered - by health insurance carriers, Medicare and
Medicaid - but they will probably require a doctor's prescription or referral.
Researching ahead of time provides the opportunity to obtain referrals and to have medical support and equipment in place before returning from the hospital. Costs may only be covered for the immediate portion of your recovery, but no longer than that. So, you may need to budget out-of-pocket dollars for additional care.
Researching ahead of time provides the opportunity to obtain referrals and to have medical support and equipment in place before returning from the hospital. Costs may only be covered for the immediate portion of your recovery, but no longer than that. So, you may need to budget out-of-pocket dollars for additional care.
3. Contact home nursing care
agencies. If it
seems your recovery will require more skilled caregiving than you
thought, reach out to local
home nursing care agencies. Many offer free consultations and will be happy
to review the post-surgical care instructions to determine whether you will
benefit from post surgical home nursing or not. The sooner you do this, the
more time you'll have to check
their referrals and compare pricing schedules so you can prepare your
budget.
4. Stock up on favorites. Have an ample supply
of favorite, easy-to-prepare foods, making sure there are simple soups and
bland basics available for the first day or two. Search Netflix ahead of time
and load up your movie queue. Books are great, but sometimes reading is difficult
if pain, dizziness, nausea or pain-med grogginess become a factor. Plan on
wearing soft, loose PJs and clothing so nothing irritates or binds
potential recovery sites or sensitive skin.
Are you interested in learning more about what will be
required in terms of your post surgical home nursing needs? Contact Nurse
Registry. We provide licensed, private nurses who can stop by once a day, a few
times a day or who can be scheduled around the clock, depending on the level of
care you require.
great blog!
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