Finally you are preparing to bring your child home – an important part of the transition is to consider how care will be provided in this setting. While life in the hospital is usually centred in one room (where everything happens), life at home is very different. A home visit by your child’s healthcare team can be invaluable in evaluating your home space and determining where care can be safety provided.
If possible, designate at least one area of your home as a place where your child can feel completely secure and not associate with medical or nursing interventions. Ideally this safe place is your child’s bed, which is associated with relaxation and rest. For children who require care around the clock, this may not be possible. Use other strategies, like the pediatric approach, distraction and positioning to optimize your child’s comfort when interventions are required.
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General considerations
Tips to get started
General considerations
To set up an appropriate space for care at home, consider the following questions:
What are your child’s main care needs?
What equipment/materials/facilities do you need to provide your child’s care?
How will waste be managed safely?
What are your child’s main care needs?
Along with your child’s healthcare team, make a list of all the different types of daily care that your child requires. This list may change so be prepared to make adjustments accordingly. Once you know what care your child needs, consider how you will sequence the tasks and where care will be provided.
What equipment/materials/facilities do you need to provide your child’s care?
In each of the practices of care described on this website, see Required materials to know what materials you require to provide the care. Always check this list with your child’s healthcare team. Plan to have at least a one month supply of all materials on hand at any time. If your funding situation allows, keep a 2-3 month supply of materials, if expiration of materials is not an issue. Keep a 2-3 day supply of materials in your packed travel bag so that getting out of the house, for whatever reason, is quicker and safer.
Consider whether your child’s equipment requires a power supply or battery recharging, identify the power outlets in the room and make sure that extension cords are appropriate for safety.
Many types of care take place with the child in a seated position or lying down. Identify where your child may sit or lie and position equipment nearby. If a surface is required to prepare materials, then place a table adjacent to where your child will be positioned. A table on wheels, with storage in drawers underneath, is something that many parents have found helpful. Label drawers so that it is easy to locate items; you may wish to use colour coding for different types of supplies to make access quicker.
Ensure that the place where you provide care has adequate lighting. As a reminder to the steps of care required, print out the Methods of care: summary (or make your own summary) and post it close to where care will be provided.
Keep a detailed list of all the equipment and materials that your child requires and store it in your child’s care organizer along with the instructions on re-ordering materials and key contact information related to equipment and materials.
Ask your child’s healthcare team for information about:
What to do if equipment malfunctions, is lost or stolen,
Whether your child requires spare equipment,
What adaptations are required for travel (by car, by plane, etc).
How will waste be managed safely?
For many children with medical complexity, the care that is required generates significant waste, especially with packaging of materials. Consider the different types of waste that may be generated and how they should be safety disposed. Talk to your child’s healthcare team for instructions specific to your child’s care.
Urine, stool collected in an ostomy bag: collect in a washable container, flush down toilet.
Other body fluids (for example, drainage from a gastrostomy tube): put in regular garbage if sealed in a bag or flush down toilet.
Paper packaging of materials: recycle if possible.
Empty plastic tubing: regular garbage, recycle if this is permitted in your area.
Needle sharps: ALWAYS dispose of sharps in a container designed specifically for this purpose; ask your child’s healthcare team how to obtain one and where to bring it for disposal.
Used dressings, bandages, protective coverings: regular garbage.
Tips to get started
Here is a summary table of basic considerations to get started. Talk with your child’s healthcare team and other parents for more suggestions.
Storage for equipment and extra supplies | |
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Refrigerated space | |
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Site of care | |
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Work surface with storage underneath | |
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Appropriate lighting | |
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Access and maneuverability | |
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Important information | |
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Waste management | |
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