Home Health Blogger

COVID-19: Daily Management Plan for Home Health Agencies

Posted by Melissa Cott on Mar 18, 2020

1. Provide home health services to priority patients only.

Since the corona virus in the US is not contained, the presumption must be that anyone can have the COVID-19 virus. Under these circumstances your HHA must limit contact to patients that require critical care and have no one - other than home health agency personnel - to provide the service.

Priority patients includes those with the following skilled needs:

  • administer critical medications that cannot be administered by anyone other than home health personnel.
  • perform critical procedures that cannot be administered by anyone other than home health personnel such wound care, IV therapy, TPN, ventilator care, etc.Download Transmission Precautions for Home Health Workers

2. Provide telephone support to patients and families.

Especially for non-priority patients, assign office personnel to be available - by phone - to patients and families that need guidance on patient care care while no-one is available to perform home visits. The person(s) must be available to provide guidance on how to manage the patient's medical condition until a home health clinician can resume visits.

3. Home health workers who make visits practice standard & transmission precautions.

Field clinicians know that COVID-19 is spread through respiratory droplets that are coughed or exhaled out by someone who has the virus. People catch the virus if they breathe in droplets from an infected person who coughs or exhales droplets.

The virus can also be transmitted by touching objects or surfaces that have been exposed to the virus, then touching the eyes, nose or mouth. The virus can live on surfaces for an indeterminate amount of time.

4. Home health workers who make visits have personal protective equipment (PPE).

Field clinicians (nurses, therapists and aides) - who are making visits - have masks, gowns, gloves, and goggles. 

No PPE? Read our Blog on COVID-19: Substitutions for Personal Protective Equipment (PPE).

5. Home health workers who make visits know how to use PPE.

Field clinicians know how to put on (don) and remove (doff) personal protective equipment. Additionally, field clinicians know how to dispose of or sanitize equipment after use.

6. Home health field staff know how to protect eyes, exposed skin and practice respiratory hygiene.

During patient care:

  • The patient must have a covering over the mouth.
  • The field clinician must have a covering over the mouth.
  • The patient must have protective cover of eyes and exposed areas of the skin.
  • The field clinician must have protective cover of eyes and skin.
  • Since virus can live on surfaces for an unknown amount of time, surfaces where patients and healthcare worker are touching must be sanitized frequently.
  • Patients must wash hands multiple times throughout the day.
  • Field staff must dispose of disposable protective gear and sanitize equipment equipment after each patient encounter.
  • Field staff must wash hands before, during and after each patient encounter.

 

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