Questions from Soap Notes - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 52
About This Presentation
Title:

Questions from Soap Notes

Description:

Does K really enjoy my company and how will I see the results. Questions ... Ryan Seacrest on American Idol), so its experimentation for us as to what ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:421
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 53
Provided by: schu6
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Questions from Soap Notes


1
Questions from Soap Notes
  • OT 665

2
OT 665 Credit Hours
  • From the website
  • OT 665 Geriatric Rehabilitation for Health
    Professionals (3)
  • From the website - course catalogue
  • OT 665. Geriatric Rehabilitation for Health
    Professionals.--Rehabilitation of elderly from
    perspective of functional impact of age-related
    changes, evaluation and remediation of functional
    limitations, and personal and environmental
    adaptations to promote continuing autonomy.
    Prerequisites OT 611, 624, and 625. 3 hours.
    (Also GER 665)
  • From my syllabus
  • CREDIT HOURS 3
  • From Miss Elaine
  • Hi Em,
  •  
  • According to the spring semester schedule that
    was distributed to faculty/staff/students -
    (student's schedules were put in their mailboxes)
  •  
  • OT-665  Geriatric Rehabilitation in Rehab
  •              Call - 0564
  •              Credit hrs - 3
  •  
  • If you need anything else, let me know
  • Elaine

3
Questions about Cognition
  • OT 665

OT 665
4
Questions
  • What sensory stimulating activities are
    appropriate to use with patients with Alzheimers
    who seem cognitively impaired?

5
Questions
  • Also because we do not know what areas of the
    brain have been affected by her TIAs, I wonder
    if some of her visual problems may in fact be due
    to the TIA?

6
Questions
  • The therapeutic activity we provided lasted for
    the majority of the hour. It was very
    frustrating working with (our support team
    friend) because she has no long or short term
    recollection.
  • She would not even acknowledge directions being
    given to her during the activity.
  • I would like to know how I could reach her in
    some way because I want to feel as if my work is
    rewarding by her showing some kind of progress.

7
Questions
  • (Our Support Team Friend) does not recognize
    herself or family members in pictures, but would
    it be helpful to look through family albums if
    the names were printed below the picture?

8
Questions
  • Is it practical to expect a person with mid- to
    late-stage Alzheimers Disease, like our care
    team friend, to remember someone new in their
    life when the memory is facilitated by repetition
    of names and the wearing of name tags?

9
Questions
  • What activities can be used with the client to
    stimulate socialization and cognition without
    getting into therapeutic interventions?

10
Questions about Engagement in Activity
  • OT 665

OT 665
11
Questions
  • Our pt. refuses to interact with the group
    activities and she is content on staying in her
    room and in her bed. If you ask her to go she
    refuses.
  • What is another approach to take to try to get
    our pt. to engage in the daily activities?

12
Questions
  • How can we help (our support team friend) learn
    to initiate her own engagement in an activity?

13
Questions
  • The clients was happy to see us when we arrived.
    She looks forward to us visiting her every week.
    I feel as though she gets most of her joy from
    conversations with others. She started a
    conversation the second I identified myself as
    one of the students.
  • Question
  • How can I encourage our client to become active
    in activities?

14
Questions
  • Should we continue to play dominos with her since
    she has expressed an interest in it, or should we
    try a different game with her?

15
Questions
  • If she did not enjoy baking cookies the first
    time, is it worth another try with a modified
    approach?
  • I think she enjoyed eating them.

16
Questions
  • What are inexpensive things we can use to engage
    (our support team friend)

17
Questions about The Support Team Friends
Interactions with the Team
  • OT 665

OT 665
18
Questions
  • Does K really enjoy my company and how will I see
    the results.

19
Questions
  • What are ways to get (our support team friend) to
    interact with us more?

20
Questions about Mobility and Safety
  • OT 665

21
Questions
  • Is it ok to help the client go to the bathroom if
    she has to go, or should the team members and I
    call for a nurse?
  • On the prior visit, the client requested
    assistance by the other team member and me in
    wheeling over to the bathroom because she had to
    go.
  • Is this near crossing over the care-team/client
    boundaries and liability?

22
Questions
  • Her daughter wants us to encourage walking and
    mobility in client.
  • Are we supposed to help her or call a nurse? How
    do we go about this topic?

23
Questions
  • Our elder is very frail, weak, and unstable on
    her feet.
  • Should we attempt transferring her because she
    requires max assist?
  • Or call for assistance?

24
Questions
  • I have been surprised at her level of function as
    compared to her daughters description. She
    appears to enjoy our visits and the opportunity
    to talk with us. I do worry about her decreasing
    level of mobility. She has become very weak from
    osteoporosis. It has been exciting, however, to
    create ways to keep her engaged cognitively.
  • Question
  • Would a therapist be able to increase mobility in
    a client such as this or would they just maintain
    it?
  • What would be some ways to increase mobility,
    such as transfers, besides standing activities?

25
Questions
  • What activities can be utilized to increase an
    elders endurance without causing over exhaustion?

26
Questions about Working with the Family
  • OT 665

OT 665
27
Questions
  • Right now, our main issue is getting to talk with
    Ks daughter, the primary caregiver, when she is
    not running out the door.
  • I have corresponded with her via e-mail once,
    before we began for scheduling.

28
Questions and Comments about The Support
Team/Group Process
  • OT 665

OT 665
29
Questions
  • What are some tactics to reduce stress within a
    group?

30
Questions
  • What is our purpose here? I do not mean this
    rudely. I just want to know why am I driving an
    hour, one way, to hear myself talk for three more
    hours, then 40 45 minutes home.

31
Comments
  • I feel that sometimes this class does overwhelm
    me with the support team.
  • It does feel like we are free sitters at times
    for the families.
  • I feel the class would benefit from guest
    speakers that work in the geriatric field (home
    health or nursing home).
  • With my limited experience, I believe that
    educating people on how to talk to their
    geriatric patients is very important.
  • I feel it would be beneficial for our class to
    have a discussion on how to help our geriatric
    patients maintain their dignity.

32
Comments
  • Im not necessarily glad that other teams are
    having the same problems engaging their support
    person in activities, but it does make me feel
    better to know that the other teams are having
    the same difficulties that we are.
  • I think it is good for us to see that not all
    activities will be tolerated by other people and
    requires us to be a bit more creative about what
    we do.
  • Im going out on a limb to see if K will enjoy
    decorating clay pots in hopes that during another
    session we can plant flowers and extend the
    activity over two sessions.
  • We really havent been able to determine exactly
    what she likes and doesnt like to do (other than
    watch Ryan Seacrest on American Idol), so its
    experimentation for us as to what activities work
    and dont work.
  • At least Im able to try out activities that
    might be useful in the future with another
    client.

33
One Question Unrelated to the Support Team (and
yet still worthwhile to discuss) and Mostly
Comments
  • I feel that Our Support Team Friend has a vital
    support person in her husband.
  • Without this source of support she would be
    dependent in all tasks.
  • Since we are not providing treatment as OTs
    for her I feel that her time is not being spent
    wisely during our visits.
  • We as care team members find ourselves just
    coming up with activities to fill the time slot
    mandated for the week instead of positively
    approaching the visits so as to benefit her
    therapeutically.
  • It is hard for me personally to approach a visit
    with a positive thought process because I am
    limited by lack of certification and lack of
    will to help the patient.
  • This may be unfortunate but I think it is the
    nature of the disease that grips our
    patient-decreased cognition/dementia, which turns
    my best attempts to engage the patient into pure
    passage of time.
  • I feel that my lack of patience with the
    individuals of this population (Alzheimers) is
    difficult to overcome.
  • Question
  • What is the purpose of the diversity activity as
    a part of this class?
  • I find it difficult to determine if I need more
    cultural diversity after attending two long
    workshops (one last semester, one this
    semester) on cultural diversity outside of my
    regular class time.

34
Support Team Stories
  • OT 665

OT 665
35
Support Team Story 1
  • On Being a Gracious Receiver
  • by Betty McCulloch, R.N.
  • Support Teams are regularly formed by co-workers
    for co-workers at The 1917 Clinic (named after
    its original street address). Betty McCulloch, RN
    and Director of Clinical Trials Research, tells
    her personal story of when her mother came to her
    home to live her last few months. When Kelly
    first mentioned the Support Team idea to me, I
    was uncomfortable with having folks do for me
    things that I was capable of doing for myself,
    and I worried that folks who report directly to
    me might feel some pressure to participate. After
    Kelly's reassurances I agreed to the formation of
    a Support Team, and I will be forever grateful
    for the support provided to me. Let me give you
    some examples of the things they did.
  • "From The Support Team Network,
    www.SupportTeam.org."

36
Support Team Story 1
  • The daily phone calls or visits met a need for
    socialization that I didn't realize I had. And,
    it kept me in contact with folks whom I'm used to
    interacting with on a daily basis. I was
    surprised and still can't really explain how
    important it was to continue to feel "included"
    at work, even though I didn't want to have to
    think about the work that I wasn't getting done.
    Crazy, but true.
  • Some provided goodies to eat, and that saved me
    some cooking time so that I could spend a little
    more time relaxing - something I really needed to
    do. Instead of cooking, I worked in my yard - and
    that was a real treat!
  • "From The Support Team Network,
    www.SupportTeam.org."

37
Support Team Story 1
  • Although I made a couple of suggestions about
    what my mother might like to eat, some also
    brought food items that they had heard me say
    over the years that I really enjoy - like sweets
    and or pimento cheese spread. I was amazed and
    very touched that anyone would remember those
    things.
  • Some helped get spur-of-the-moment prescriptions
    that it would have otherwise been logistically
    tedious and downright expensive to get.
  • Some brought my car from the repair shop so that
    I didn't have to rent a car and hire a sitter in
    order to accomplish that.
  • And last but not least, they said such sweet
    things about my mother.
  • "From The Support Team Network,
    www.SupportTeam.org."

38
Support Team Story 1
  • Having been single for many years, and having
    looked after my mother and her affairs for over
    15 years, I'm used to doing everything for myself
    and my mother. So I could have taken care of all
    the things that were so lovingly done for us.
  • But I've learned, now, how wonderful it feels to
    be "taken care of." And to receive those
    expressions of caring, and the prayers, at a time
    when I was grieving over my mother's
    deteriorating health was simply a tremendous
    feeling. I've returned to work after 3 weeks
    feeling completely refreshed, and that feeling is
    in large part a result of having a Support Team.
  • I've wracked my brain to figure out how to
    reciprocate the many kindnesses we received and
    continue to receive from our Support Team, but
    nothing adequate comes to mind.
  • However, I'm really looking forward to
    participating in the next Support Team that is
    developed, and to attending the August training
    session for Support Teams!
  • "From The Support Team Network,
    www.SupportTeam.org."

39
Support Team Story 2
  • Sacred Moments
  • by Malcolm Marler
  • It was a sacred moment. Ten care team members sat
    around a table with donuts, orange juice, and
    coffee and remembered. This team represented a
    small Catholic parish, St. Joseph's, in the west
    end of Birmingham. They ranged in age from young
    adults to senior adults. Their Care Team Friend,
    Ruth, had died of Alzheimer's disease and cancer
    just three weeks earlier.
  • "From The Support Team Network,
    www.SupportTeam.org."

40
Support Team Story 2
  • Practical Needs
  • They remembered the things they had done for
    their Friend and her husband. One man in his
    thirties talked about his role on the team had
    been cleaning their Friend's house regularly. "I
    thought it would be more awkward than it was," he
    said with misty eyes. "But I was just glad to
    help." Another talked about the yard work and
    laughed about Al, the Care Team Friend's spouse,
    who is so committed to helping others that he
    would be cutting a neighbor's grass while his own
    was being taken care of by a team member! They
    had learned that it was still important for him
    to help others, despite his burden of being a
    caregiver. The team had freed him up to do what
    he loved.
  • "From The Support Team Network,
    www.SupportTeam.org."

41
Support Team Story 2
  • Emotional Needs
  • Many of the team members had delivered dinner
    regularly, and just as importantly, sat down at
    the kitchen table to eat with Al so he wouldn't
    have to be alone. At least two of the women made
    friends with the hospice aide who did most of the
    personal care for Ruth. They went beyond the role
    of most care teams and showed up to assist her in
    bathing their Care Team Friend. "Because it
    needed to be done," they said matter-of-factly.
  • "From The Support Team Network,
    www.SupportTeam.org."
  •  

42
Support Team Story 2
  • Spiritual Needs
  • They remembered saying the rosary and praying
    together on several occasions. Others called
    regularly, visited, and listened often. One team
    member talked about how this experience had
    changed her. "My prayer life is different now. I
    take time to thank God for my blessings." Another
    said she had learned how to put her faith into
    action. Most were present at the wake and the
    funeral. Each agreed they had been the ones
    blessed in the whole experience. Each one had
    been changed, and yet all were grieving in their
    own way while supporting one another.
  • "From The Support Team Network,
    www.SupportTeam.org."

43
Support Team Story 2
  • Looking ahead
  • And then their attention turned to what they
    would do next.
  • They understood that a spouse does not lose the
    love of his life after more than sixty years of
    marriage and be fine after three weeks. They
    committed to be present with him in the weeks and
    months to come for as long as it will take.
    Special attention would be given during the
    upcoming holidays.
  • "From The Support Team Network,
    www.SupportTeam.org."

44
Support Team Story 2
  • They agreed they wanted to take on another
    assignment in a couple of months, maybe someone
    elderly in their parish or community. Al has
    mentioned he will probably end up joining their
    team in the coming year. And they will then turn
    to someone new who has a need, and the love of
    God will be shared again.
  • This was Christian community at its best. And
    then I remembered. This is why we have Care
    Teams.
  • Malcolm Marler
  • "From The Support Team Network,
    www.SupportTeam.org."

45
Family Perspective
  • by Al Germann
  • The following article appeared in the One Voice
    Catholic newspaper as a letter to the editor,
    Birmingham, AL, August 21, 1998. Your
    article entitled "Support Team Offers
    Unconditional Love, Support, To Those In Need" in
    last week's edition of One Voice traces the
    history of the Support Team Network.
  • I would like to elaborate a bit on the
    "unconditional love and support" given. My family
    is the recipient of that unconditional love and
    I can tell you that this TEAM makes all the
    difference in the world. There really is no word
    that I can think of to describe the feelings of
    gratitude and the love that we experience from
    these parishioners.
  • These ladies and gentleman are for the most part,
    young to middle aged couples or persons who have
    jobs, families, and homes to care for. Yet they
    come together each Sunday to pray and to discern
    together as a small faith community how they can
    assist their "Support Team Friend." Therein is
    born that unconditional love which reaches beyond
    themselves, busy though they are.
  • "From The Support Team Network,
    www.SupportTeam.org."

46
Family Perspective
  • One paragraph in the article stands out and
    needs to be emphasized "The family being helped
    is overwhelmed by the outpouring of love and
    support from the Team. The Team members, in turn,
    knowing they are putting their faith into action
    by demonstrating God's love through compassion,
    adds a purpose to their own existence. One of the
    best aspects of being on a Support Team is
    becoming an extended family member to the ones
    you are helping."
  • After the doctor explains that your loved one has
    only weeks to live and after the tears and
    emotions comes the inevitable question "What are
    we to do now?"
  • Only because the Support Team Network was already
    taking shape at St. Joseph's could we even think
    of bringing our terminally ill wife/mother home
    to die. Therein lies the benefit of the Support
    Team Network.
  • You cannot measure unconditional love and service
    in quantity of hours of service rather this
    SERVICE makes the impossible become possible and
    so we are caring for "Mom" at home!
  • "From The Support Team Network,
    www.SupportTeam.org."

47
Family Perspective
  • No, I'm not overlooking Hospice Care and the
    professional care they provide. They are but
    another facet of unconditional love and service.
  • Thank God for this small faith community that has
    been born at St. Joseph's and has thrived in
    reaching out to others, while molding themselves
    into a family, such as Pope John Paul II has
    envisioned in RENEW 2000. Last week this
    "unbelievable" Team came together at our house
    and said the Rosary with us.
  • I will not mention names they would not allow
    that. But I will publicly acknowledge the huge
    debt gratitude that our family owes this Team of
    loving/caring people. God Bless them all!
  • One final advantage this Team has afforded I can
    still carry out my "deacon" duties, both in
    Church and in the community. Thank God for that!
  • Forever in debt to the parishioners of St.
    Joseph's I am,
  • (Deacon) Al Germann
  • Birmingham
  • Editor's Note Ruth Germann died at home on
    Wednesday, October 21, 1998. His Support Team
    continues to minister to him during his grief.
  • "From The Support Team Network,
    www.SupportTeam.org."

48
Questions to Ask Yourself
  • OT 665

OT 665
49
Questions to Ask Yourself
  • The Tony Robbins Approach to Support Team
    Survival
  • (ask how can I, not why is it)
  • 1. How can I make what I am doing on the support
    team helpful to the family?
  • 2. When I help the family, how can I find out if
    my doing that is also helping my support team
    friend?
  • 3. How can I make this this support team
    experience into a positive and worthwhile
    learning experience for me?
  • 4. How can I make a meaningful connection with my
    support team friend - one that does not include
    active doing?

http//www.personalpower.com/index.php?acntGHTZZ0
1H
50
Questions to Ask Yourself
  • The Tony Robbins Approach to Support Team
    Survival
  • (ask how can I, not why is it
  • 5. How can I find ways in which my support team
    friend is likeable, or loveable to me?
  • 6. How can I bring joy to a person with cognitive
    (or psychosocial or sensorimotor) deficits such
    as my support team friend?
  • 7. How can I build a rapport with someone as
    challenging as my support team friend?
  • 8. How can I create and maintain a positive
    attitude about this support team experience?

http//www.personalpower.com/index.php?acntGHTZZ0
1H
51
Questions to Ask Yourself
  • The Tony Robbins Approach to Support Team
    Survival
  • (ask how can I, not why is it
  • 9. how can I use some of my special gifts or
    interests to help my support team friend?

http//www.personalpower.com/index.php?acntGHTZZ0
1H
52
Questions and Answers
  • ?
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com