Most patients are admitted to
nursing homes because they can not feed themselves.
I am so sad to see such nasty comments on here people being told that they hope they will be left alone in
nursing homes because they couldn't care for their pet... Really awfull.
His 92 - year - old mother who had been a literature professor for many years was now in
a nursing home because of senility, terribly fragile skin, and several fractures from osteoporosis.
My dad has Alzheimers and was just put in
a nursing home because my mom can't handle taking care of him anymore.
97 - Year - Old Retiree Evicted From
Nursing Home Because He Played Ukulele Too Much A 97 - year - old former Merchant Marine evicted from nursing home facility where he resided for playing the ukulele too much.
Any person can claim for the medical expenses incurred in a Hospital /
Nursing home because of an accident.
Not exact matches
Home healthcare in particular is in high demand, mainly because aging Baby Boomers want to stay in their homes as long as possible and are opting for in - home nursing care and assistance rather than moving to assisted - living facilit
Home healthcare in particular is in high demand, mainly
because aging Baby Boomers want to stay in their
homes as long as possible and are opting for in -
home nursing care and assistance rather than moving to assisted - living facilit
home nursing care and assistance rather than moving to assisted - living facilities.
TALLAHASSEE — Three months after 13 elderly residents in a South Florida
nursing home died
because of sweltering conditions following Hurricane Irma, lawsuits and legislative inaction are holding up efforts aimed at preventing such deaths in the future.
Health Minister Helena Jaczek said she could not comment on the lawsuits
because they are before the courts but told reporters the Liberal government — which is up for re-election June 7 — has increased funding for
nursing homes since taking power in 2003.
Because of that week, not only was my own life changed profoundly through friendships and awakenings, but I'm proud to say that we — and I mean all of us because you have all walked this road with our family — we have partnered with incredible leaders to build a school for kids in earthquake ground zero Port - au - Prince (staffed and run by Haitians), supported a home - based village for trafficked children near the border, built a preschool for early support for these children, supported schooling and food programs in neglected villages decimated by the cholera outbreak, supported pregnant and nursing women with a fantastic maternity centre, and so muc
Because of that week, not only was my own life changed profoundly through friendships and awakenings, but I'm proud to say that we — and I mean all of us
because you have all walked this road with our family — we have partnered with incredible leaders to build a school for kids in earthquake ground zero Port - au - Prince (staffed and run by Haitians), supported a home - based village for trafficked children near the border, built a preschool for early support for these children, supported schooling and food programs in neglected villages decimated by the cholera outbreak, supported pregnant and nursing women with a fantastic maternity centre, and so muc
because you have all walked this road with our family — we have partnered with incredible leaders to build a school for kids in earthquake ground zero Port - au - Prince (staffed and run by Haitians), supported a
home - based village for trafficked children near the border, built a preschool for early support for these children, supported schooling and food programs in neglected villages decimated by the cholera outbreak, supported pregnant and
nursing women with a fantastic maternity centre, and so much more.
To some extent, this attitude of denial has come about
because of changes in our society in this century: the marked decrease in the number of deaths at an early age; the development of specialized professions for the care of the dying and the dead; the emergence of geographical mobility, with the consequence that most of us live at some distance from aging and dying relatives, including parents; the growth of separate communities for the aging, not only
nursing homes but retirement communities.
I guess I'm not a real big fan of
home births, but that might be
because I've never had a kid, and I plan on going to
nursing school so I tend to side with the more traditional western medicine.
Most people didn't know she continued to have my milk
because we only
nursed at
home and increasingly just at night.
I eventually only
nursed at
home,
because of a variety of reasons, so I just wore a regular bra, though one without under wire most of the time, and took it off when I got
home.
I will use those around anyone not in my immediate family (
because again, I am not talented at
nursing without baring all), but at
home I don't.
For years I thought it was
because [mothers in the practice] had their babies at
home, they
nursed their babies as much as two years, they gave minimal pharmaceuticals.
We're planning the birth of our second at
home because modern well trained midwives and
nurse - midwives carry all of the emergency equipment that birth centers have.
When I took him
home he almost didn't eat for 4 days
because he just almost completely refused to
nurse and cried so hard every time we tried.
S / he tells you that you should not stay in hospital to
nurse your sick child
because it is important you rest at
home.
Actually, it all seems somewhat horrifying to me, perhaps
because I've spent so much time the past few years hanging around my dad's
nursing home, so I'm a bit thankful I probably won't be around to see it (and based on what I observe in
nursing homes, maybe we should focus on keeping men alive longer so women, after caretaking for so many years, might have someone to look after them in their old age).
I just happened to run across is paid I was looking up information in regards to breastfeeding I have breasts at all my kids I have 5 my baby is 11 months and I am still breastfeeding I don't want to quit anytime soon especially since I can not have any more children I enjoyed the time that I still have a
home and knowing that I am doing good for him makes me feel like a good mother but I am concerned
because he doesn't want to eat food very really can I get
home to eat he would just
nurse all day every hour to two hours he refuses anything in a bottle or cup even if its juice I'm concerned that he's not getting enough to eat
because all he wants is to
nurse can you please advise me on this thank you
I was only able to breastfeed
because a wonderful lactation
nurse from WIC came to my
home for 10 days after the birth of my child to help us start out properly.
at first, it was really hard when jim would put her to bed if i were
home,
because i enjoyed
nursing dylan.
I once met another stay - at -
home - mom who was at her wits end,
because she was
nursing her baby every couple of hours and pumping every hour after he was finished.
I have a hard enough time trying to limit
nursing to just before bed, it makes me want to cry sometimes
because he wants to
nurse when we are at
home during the day, but it hurts so bad.
i loved this article
because it hits so close to
home for all of us mothers who are still
nursing their toddlers.
And I still
nurse his little 2 1/2 year old sister
because she says that milkies make her feel better and
because when I leave for work she always asks «you come
home and nursa me»
I had a 31 weeker, and while I was * immensely * grateful for the amazing NICU care he received, I would go
home and read Jeevan's blog and feel somewhat guilty and so, so sad to read that while my preemie was snug and warm and fed in his isolette, being watched over by highly trained
nurses and respiratory therapists, a baby older than mine died
because the power went out in the hospital overnight (no backup generator) and they couldn't keep him warm enough.
I write this
because as a labor and delivery
nurse I have seen a mom come in when something has happened during a
home delivery and the baby did not make it and the mother barely made it.
Because we co-sleep, even at conferences and meetings where I hardly saw her during the day, at night my daughter would snuggle up against my side, tucking her fingers and toes under my body, and make up for not
nursing during the day as much as she might have at
home.
Having gone 2 nights and 3 days without
nursing my Littlest, and unable to
nurse when I got
home because I was all drugged up — I opted to call it quits with «Mamas Milk.»
Baby readmitted from
home at 16 days
because of
nursing problems, died at 19 days of previously undetected Group B streptococcus
I wonder if it was
because she'd have to leave
home and go out into the big, scary, evil world to attend a real
nursing school.
I pump at work and
nurse when i am at
home, its not easy to get up in the middle of work and pump every 3 hours, but i do it
because # 1 its healthy for my baby and # 2 i don have to carry around a tub of formula and # 3 it helps me loose the baby weight.
I made it
home about two hours before Shabbat and having the samples to use then was wonderful,
because otherwise I would have done nothing but
nurse over the entire day.
My daughter isn't in school yet, but I have put the stop on quite a few plans at different times to just stay
home,
because it seemed like she needed to be on the
home base and
nurse all morning long.
I wish it was more socially acceptable,
because I think a lot more children would benefit from extended (full - term)
nursing, and I think a lot more mommies who do it, wouldn't have to feel embarrassed, or that they can only do it in their own
home.
But
nursing is also really good for baby's emotional development, both
because of the close physical bond baby forms with Mom, but also
because it offers baby a healthy «
home base» to return to when he is tired, fussy, or begins adventuring past Mom's arms, getting boo - boos, etc..
Even though I didn't do it at
home, I got up and
nursed her every time she woke up
because we all were in close quarters.
My milk still hadn't come in and emergency supplementing was implemented (by an LC who just FIVE MINUTES BEFORE compared formula to crack cocaine, and who then bizarrely told me to pump at
home INSTEAD of
nursing, while Jason fed Noah bottles,
because she thought I needed / wanted... a break?
She said «you might wan na think about this» but this
nurse was like «you are gonna do it every 3 hours» and she told me «you are gonna rent this
because whatever you have
home is not gonna work, if you wan na set it up you have to do it right now» So, she told me «get whoever is with you to go rent a pump it's like you are gonna be on this every 3 hours» she was like «when you get in the shower you are gonna you know, you know comb your boobs, it's gonna hurt but you just gonna do it every time you shower» you know and she was like «you have to shower like twice a day so, that it gets going before you come.»
Well, looking at the 10 steps I failed at: — # 6 nothing other than breast milk (gave hungry baby formula b / c I was too tired and drugged up to
nurse more than 5 minutes)-- # 7 rooming in (being tired and drugged up I actually wanted to sleep)-- # 9 no pacifiers (I would rather baby have the SIDS prevention and soothing that comes from sucking)-- # 4 initiate breastfeeding within 30 minutes of birth (that C - section thing where they sliced my guts open interfered with that timing)-- # 10 I was referred to the support group but sure as hell didn't go (
because I deemed healing at
home from my surgery more important than being browbeaten about how I was feeding my baby).
But then, one time, when we were trying to like put socks on our baby to get ready to go
home like when we were beginning discharge, we accidently bump the Baby LoJack off and the
nurse came running into the room
because what it also does was automatically lock down the whole maternity ward like it locks their door shot and everyone goes with their stations
because it's so tough and alarms so that no one can kidnap your baby basically.
Ita, I don't think I've ever met a woman who
nurses anywhere, in public or at
home because she «feels like it».
Because my son rarely
nursed away from
home, strangers did not generally know that he was still breastfeeding.
I just had another period and I know that my supply dipped
because she was
nursing a whole lot more while we were
home together during the holidays.
If a
nurse says «we can't discharge your baby
because he lost a pound of weight,» does a mother have a right to insist on taking her baby
home anyway?
I never
nursed Miss A in public, I'm not really sure why not, maybe
because it was all new to me, I used a blanket to cover myself at
home and stayed away from public places at feeding times.
For over a year I have had to come
home and put her to bed, no matter what time it was I knew I had to hurry
home because she'd be tired and cranky and refusing to sleep until I
nursed her to sleep.
My 3rd pregnancy a yr later went great normal pregnancy but 2 months before I had my son I had a staph infection but I was free of a staph infection when he was born but the
nurses found out my joy turned to a living nightmare no
nurse would take care of me my son wasn't allowed in the nursery only good thing that came out of it but me being a epileptic I needed daily medication for my seizures my ob / gyn for some unknown reason told me to bring my meds from
home not normal procedure its against hospital rules but I did as he told me and thank god I did or I would have died my sons
nurses were the only
nurses I saw my whole weekend in the hospital they could only take my vitals and give me the basics pain meds & stool softener they fed me too if not for them I would have starved they brought me my hospital food its dangerous for a epileptic after birth to be denied food meds and regular monitoring
because stress from the birth could make me seize but they didn't my ob told them flat out I was not infected and to remove me from isolation but they refused.