It was pretty disappointing.
Okay... so...
Home care nursing is it’s own seperate little world. There are several different divisions / branches of it... and the less common forms are run mostly by word of mouth, rather than through agencies. (Because fhere’s not enough money in it for agencies to profit by carving out a niche OR no company has claimed that niche, yet). I was working on my BSRN and had never even freaking
heard of several of the forms of it until my kid got sick, and nurses started hitting me up at funerals (when you have a hospital kid, you go to a lot of kid’s funerals, as your friends kids die). Okay, that sounds bad, but it’s really not. Again, it’s a word of mouth industry, and there are caring and compassionate ways to go about asking stressed out parents about their home care situation, rather than being a sleazy ambulance chasing buzzard. And you reeeeally don’t
want agency nurses doing your home care 99% of the time. (More on that below).
Since your doc recommended it? That means he/she
probably knows either individuals who either use psychiatric home care nurses OR a few of the RNs/LPNs/MSWs/LCSWs (socially) who do so.
>slight tangent for a moment<
It’s more common to find RNs working on their LPN and using home care as “acute care setting hours” and MSWs working on their LCSW “supervised internship hours” than the full blown doctorates. But you do find the higher qualifications doing it, as well. Usually they have small children at home, and want to set their own hours, or are supplementing a professor’s salary (nursing professors make Jack, less than half their nursing salary, whilst medschool professors make commensurate wages as doctoring, it’s a long running scandal). Either way? You’re looking at Masters level care (6-8years) & above, most of the time. Whilst agencies? Are usually sending out people with CNAs (3 months). That’s why they’re just supervising meds, not doing any actual psychiatric nursing. You can’t get a 5th year specialty, or masters speciality, in 3 months ;) But agencies don’t want people who make 100k a year. They want CNA’s who make minimum wage. It increases their profit margin.
>back on target<
Since your doc recommended it? Ask them about individuals they know who work in the field that you can get in contact with, since the agencies in your area only do med management. Their client list may be full, but once you get tapped into the network they’ll know of others -word of mouth industry- who have space in their roster.
It’s also not freakish or bizarre to need care somewhere between 8pm-4am (ie after work, whether you get off at 7pm or Midnight). When you have medical home care, there are 3 shifts of nurses you have to -or can- fill. Nurses work all hours, it’s not a 9-5 gig. Psychiatric nurses doing parttime home care / case management? There WILL be people who reeeeally want to be able to put their kids to bed at 8pm, and then go meet with clients for the next 4 hours, come home, and wake up with their kids in the morning. The trick is just going to be finding them. If your doc doesn’t know anyone in your area, putting the word out on the nurses bulletin board at the hospital would be another avenue.