Monday, March 15, 2010

Senior Care


Care Aides provide a variety of services and assistance that allow elderly and disabled residents to live comfortably. A care aide not only helps an individual but also provides peace of mind to family members who are concerned about a loved one in need of personal care. Care Aides are naturally compassionate and, as one aide said, will try to help patients so that the patients can help themselves. Individuals enter into the field for a variety of reasons; some do so after caring for a family member or loved one while others are retirees looking to stay active.

A Certificate Residential Care Aide can find employment at Facilities, hospitals, nursing homes, senior home care agencies, hospices and community senior service programs. Usually a Registered Nurse supervises the Residential Care Aide Diploma. However, the care aide is the person who has daily contact with the senior and can be the most valuable source of information about the senior's condition for doctors and family members.

Many times its is a challenge to provide quality care to multiple patients. Because of this, many Residential Care Aides prefer to work for senior home care agencies where they are caring for just one person at a time.


Duties Residential Care Aide performs include:

Dressing
Bathing
Feeding
Toileting
Vital Signs
Catheter Care
Assists with ambulation
Range of Motion Exercises
Assists into and out of wheelchairs
Makes beds, changes bed linens
Turn bedridden patients every two hours, to prevent bedsores
Provides updates to care plans to supervisor
Monitor Safety
Documents daily care provided in care plan notes
Light housekeeping to maintain cleanliness




Contact E-mail: pricessmara@yahoo.ca