Home Care Assistance Services Give Your Mom and You a Break
What do you help your mom do each week? Are you there for a few hours? A couple of days? Maybe you have to stop in every day. Week after week, do you find yourself getting tired of helping her?
Caregiver burnout is a real issue. If you’re tired, you’re likely to miss important steps. Plus, you are going to start resenting your mom for taking up more and more of your free time. It’s time to step back and look at all that home care aides can do.
Appointments and Scheduling
Hire caregivers for appointment days. Instead of having to take a day off, caregivers can help your mom get ready, drive her to the medical practice or hospital, and help her with registration. At the end of the appointment, your mom’s caregiver can help her schedule a follow-up appointment.
When your mom’s prescription pills are running low, her caregiver can help her order a refill. If it can’t be delivered, her caregiver can help her get to the pharmacy when it’s open and pick up that prescription refill.
Groceries and Meals
Your mom can’t shop on her own or prepare meals anymore. Have her work with a home care aide to plan her weekly menu, complete a shopping list, and shop for the items she needs.
When your mom has home care assistance services, her caregiver will help her choose the right items for her nutritional needs. She’ll have someone to assist her with the checkout process and load the car. At home, her caregiver carries items into the home and puts them away.
Housekeeping and Laundry
Have a caregiver help your mom with all of the housekeeping and laundry chores. If your mom has a hard time lifting and pushing her vacuum, her caregiver can do it. Your mom loves to dust, but washing dishes and putting them where they go is hard for her. Her caregiver can.
The other benefit to home care aides is that your mom’s caregiver can strip her sheets, make the bed with new bedding, and hang fresh towels. Her caregiver can gather her dirty clothing and wash everything. When it’s clean, it gets folded and put away where everything belongs.
Transportation and Errands
Your mom isn’t able to drive anymore, but that never means she’s stuck at home. Have a caregiver drive her to stores, businesses, and medical offices. Her caregiver can take her on an outing to the theater to see a movie or escort her to the museum for a fun day out.
Talk to a home care assistance agency about respite care. Have a professional caregiver spend time with your mom each week. She gets a break from you, but you also get a break. Use that time to sleep in, run errands, or visit friends. A home care assistance specialist can help you get started.