Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hopefully this won't be taken the wrong way. You are trying to get as much bang for your buck cramming this all into an hour. When we paid for a half day and then a full day we were happy if the person just provided companionship, made sure meds were taken and made sure our loved one ate. These are poorly paid jobs and you need to factor in downtime. That is what makes it appealing despite the poor pay. If you are willing to pay top dollar for someone to do all you ask in an hour, great. Otherwise I don't think you will find someone willing to be on the entire hour. It is nice to have someone there to chat, etc. If the doctor is recommending cameras this is more than a one hour a day gig.
This does seem like a good reality check. Thank you.
-OP
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Basically, someone to check on my dad, maybe make tuna salad, maybe look to see that he’s taken a pill.
He’s a little foggy from chemo but pleasant, up with the news, able to function. Just foggy enough to need a little help.
Do I start with Caring.com, TaskRabbit or something else?
This might be the tricky part. In some states, home health aides are not allowed to dispense medication.
https://www.nahc.org/assets/1/7/07HomeHealthAidAdmnMed
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, what you want is better than what I am going to suggest, but here's another idea. Get him a pill box that springs open at a certain time everyday. The pharmacy will fill it. You call every single day at the same time - and he takes his pill. Something like that. The meal part, IDK, a grown man should be able to feed himself. If not, that's a 3 meal a day problem, not a once a day problem.
You could be right. It seems as if, when I talk to the sibling who’s really in charge here, the job description keeps changing and tilting more toward, “Msybr it’s time for assisted living.”![]()
- OP.
Anonymous wrote:OP, what you want is better than what I am going to suggest, but here's another idea. Get him a pill box that springs open at a certain time everyday. The pharmacy will fill it. You call every single day at the same time - and he takes his pill. Something like that. The meal part, IDK, a grown man should be able to feed himself. If not, that's a 3 meal a day problem, not a once a day problem.
Anonymous wrote:Post on Next door or a neighborhood listserv. When we had a similar situation, we found a SAHM that was willing to take the job. She would walk her child to the bus stop which was near our relative's house, then she would stop in and take care of our relative. She would check the house out, figure out if there were basic chores she could do (change a light bulb, clean a mess in the fridge, load or run the dishwasher) then she would make sure that their meal was prepped for lunch, make sure to remind them of medication and head home. We had it flexible, e.g. not exactly one hour. We often paid her 2-3 hours and I'm sure that some of that was just hanging around, talking to our relative and wasting time, but it was companionship and making sure everything was handled. We weren't worried about the number of hours, just that it was done every day. She probably averaged about 6-8 hours a week and we left it to her to decide how much time was needed.
It was so worth it to be flexible and allow her to charge more time (we noticed that she charged more time near her child's birthday and near the holidays, but we didn't mind subsidizing her holidays). Plus, she and our relative developed a nice friendship that was worthwhile to encourage.
So, my suggestion is to post it and be flexible about paying more to find someone who will be able to do what you want.
Anonymous wrote:Hopefully this won't be taken the wrong way. You are trying to get as much bang for your buck cramming this all into an hour. When we paid for a half day and then a full day we were happy if the person just provided companionship, made sure meds were taken and made sure our loved one ate. These are poorly paid jobs and you need to factor in downtime. That is what makes it appealing despite the poor pay. If you are willing to pay top dollar for someone to do all you ask in an hour, great. Otherwise I don't think you will find someone willing to be on the entire hour. It is nice to have someone there to chat, etc. If the doctor is recommending cameras this is more than a one hour a day gig.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Basically, someone to check on my dad, maybe make tuna salad, maybe look to see that he’s taken a pill.
He’s a little foggy from chemo but pleasant, up with the news, able to function. Just foggy enough to need a little help.
Do I start with Caring.com, TaskRabbit or something else?
This might be the tricky part. In some states, home health aides are not allowed to dispense medication.
https://www.nahc.org/assets/1/7/07HomeHealthAidAdmnMed
My grandmother had live in help and while they can’t dispense the medicine, they absolutely can tell the person they are caring for that it is time for meds, mark down that meds were taken, and encourage them to take them. What they can’t to is make the person take meds if they don’t want to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would get an aging care professional to come to the home and assess level of support needed. A doctor sees him briefly. There is a good chance he needs more than an hour a day.
As others said in most areas only a nurse can have him take the pill. It gets tricky with checking if he took it.
If it's too much for him to make his own sandwich then I would get more than an hour a day. Also, things can go down hill fast with a fall or a med mixup. If an aging care professional who comes to the home tells you an hour is all that is needed, then I stand corrected.
Sorry I see it was tuna salad not sandwich. If you have a recipe he likes, make sure the person has it with all the groceries needed unless he isn't picky.