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During the time of the Civil War, women were expected to stay home,
get married and have children. Daisy Jane Allen has other ideas.
She wants to be a nurse and use her gift of healing. With the very
reluctant approval of her well-to-do father, she studies medicine
under Doctor Robert Lawrence. Love blooms between student and
instructor though neither are aware of the other's feelings. The
Civil War rages and the Union needs doctors. Duty calls and Robert
signs up. When he tells Daisy he is going to war, he shocks her by
also proposing marriage and asks her to accompany him as his nurse
and wife. The newlyweds meet up with a Union militia unit and soon
find themselves combating hunger, death, theheartbreak of warand
the myriad of battlefield diseases.
This book is for all those who may have to enter, or place a loved
one in a skilled nursing home. It comes from someone who has
twenty-seven years of experience "in the trenches" as a director of
nursing, administrator, regional manager and consultant in
long-term care facilities, commonly known as nursing homes,
reaching across the country. I have witnessed many, many family
members' joy, tragedy, discouragement and elation in my nursing
homes and I have learned from each of them. This is also for those
who will feel or have felt the aching, pounding guilt because you
had no other choice but a nursing home for your loved one. I dealt
with the guilt of family members every day of my career. I
understood the guilt and I understood the fear and concerns. They
were entrusting a person that they loved very dearly to people they
didn't know. Besides that, they had heard all the horror stories.
Would all of these terrible things befall them and their loved one?
If you are the caretaker of a loved one, there may come a time when
you have reached the final limit. This is mostly guaranteed to
happen unless the caregiver has devoted their entire life and
future to the loved one. This does happen but most people cannot
endure the physical and mental stress of the never-ending care and
problems that go along with tending to their loved one's needs. It
could be your very ill mother, incontinent of both bowel and
bladder that requires feeding and total care. How long can you keep
up the 24-hour job? You have a spouse and maybe even children that
need attention and support from you. You will know when the time
comes to do something. You can find no way around putting your
loved one in a nursing home. You experience tremendous guilt; you
lose sleep. But in the end, it's the only thing than can be done.
The very ill can benefit from nursing home care at a good facility.
Of course, there are also residents in nursing facilities who are
recovering from surgery, are involved in extensive daily therapy
and of course, the Alzheimer's victims and the grossly confused who
benefit as well. Other patients with less severe problems can be
admitted to assisted living centers until the required nursing care
has surpassed the center's skills and licensing. There are bad
assisted living centers just like there are bad hospitals and bad
nursing homes. You've got to do your homework. Through this
writing, I will attempt to acquaint you with how a good nursing
home is run, how to tour a nursing home and what to look for. There
will be tips and a few stories along the way. It is my hope that
you will realize that the nursing home experience doesn't have to
be a horror story, and that you will know you have the ability to
find the right place for your loved one. So, come along with me. It
won't be complicated and as I said, I've included some of my
stories to make it easier to understand. The last thing I want is
for this work to be as dry as a textbook. You will find many facts
repeated in this book. I've done this on purpose as there are
always many different contexts. My main purpose is to help you find
the nursing home right for you and your loved one, break down the
fear of nursing homes and relieve some of the guilt trips so very
common in family members. Only with a positive attitude can you and
your loved one make the nursing home experience a good one. I will
always urge you to do your homework in selecting the long-term care
facility that is right for you and/or your loved one. This is for
you.
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