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Can I Have ICU Nurses at Home for My Ventilated Son Instead of Support Workers?
Can I Have ICU Nurses at Home for My Ventilated Son Instead of Support Workers?
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Good morning, good afternoon, wherever you are. Welcome to another Intensive Care at Home livestream. Just waiting for another second until the people have come in.
Okay. Good morning, good afternoon, good evening, wherever you are. Welcome to another Intensive Care at Home livestream. My name is Patrik Hutzel, founder and director of Intensive Care at Home.
Today’s topic is: Can I have ICU nurses at home for my ventilated son with tracheostomy instead of support workers? And we’ll dive really deep into today’s topic. Before we do that, I want to welcome all of our viewers. Also want to welcome the viewers that are watching this on replay if they can’t attend the livestream. If you have any questions today, please type them into the chat pad. I will also give you the option to dial into the show if we have enough time, depending on how many questions come in.
Before we go into today’s topic, you might wonder what makes me qualified to talk about today’s topic. I’m a critical care nurse by background. I have worked in intensive care/critical care for over 20 years in three different countries. I have also worked as a nurse unit manager in intensive care for over five years. I am the founder and director of Intensive Care at Home, where we provide Intensive Care at Home services for predominantly long-term ventilated adults and children with tracheostomies, but also for clients on BIPAP (bilevel positive airway pressure)/, (continuous positive airway pressure) ventilation, which is also known as non-invasive ventilation. We provide home TPN (Total Parenteral Nutrition), and home infusion services and basically, we’re replicating an intensive care but in the community.
Currently, we are working or we are operating all around Australia in all the major capital cities, including rural and regional areas. We are also in the process of branching out into the United States. If you’re watching this from the United States, you should contact us as well at intensivecareathome.com and we can help you take the next steps if you’re looking for Intensive Care at Home services.
With Intensive Care at Home in Australia, we are currently employing hundreds of years of intensive care nursing experience in the community. We bring skills into the community that no other service provider can match in Australia. We are the only service provider in Australia that has third party accreditation and NDIS (National Disability Insurance Scheme) accreditation for Intensive Care at Home. We have built very unique intellectual property in this space again that I believe no other service provider can match.
Now, as I said, if you have any questions in relation to today’s topic, please type them into the chat pad.
Now, who’s this video for today? This video obviously is for anyone who has a loved one in intensive care on a ventilator long term, especially with the tracheostomy, but also if you have a loved one in intensive care, long-term potentially on BiPAP, CPAP ventilation, not necessarily a tracheostomy. The video is for anyone who is at home already on a ventilator with a tracheostomy, but is feeling unsafe because they might have support workers instead of intensive care nurses. And I will break this down today and I will dive really deep into that.
Continue reading at: https://intensivecareathome.com/can-i-have-icu-nurses-at-home-for-my-ventilated-son-instead-of-support-worker/
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