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CHOOSING
A HOME HEALTH AGENCY
Questions
To Ask
People often receive
home health services following hospitalization or care in other settings. Often
the hospital discharge planner or social worker provides information on home health
agencies—as do physicians, friends, and family members. Patients and their families
or friends should ask the hospital for a list of home health care agencies in
the community and use the following questions to help choose an available agency:
- Does the agency
serve my community? For how long?
- Who owns the agency?
How long as the agency been in business?
- Can the agency
provide me with written information about its services, the cost of its services,
its billing procedures and insurance eligibility requirements?
- Can the agency
provide me with written information about the rights and responsibilities of the
providers, patients and caregivers?
- Is the agency
"approved" (or "certified") to provide services to Medicare
patients?
- Is the agency
inspected by any outside organization? May I see the results of the last inspection?
- Does the agency
perform a customer satisfaction survey? May I see the results of the last survey?
- Is there a written
plan of care for each patient? Does the agency involve the patient and caregivers
in designing this plan and educate them about the care provided?
- Will the same
caregiver be sent to my home for each visit?
- Does the agency
schedule care at any time of the day or night that my physician says is necessary?
- What kind of training
does the agency require for caregivers?
- Do the agency’s
caregivers work directly for the agency? How are they supervised? Are they subject
to criminal background checks?
- How does the agency
respond to emergencies? How long does it take to respond to calls?
- Who should I call
with questions or complaints? How will the agency respond?
- Will the agency
help find other community services such as Meals on Wheels or homemakers services
– or help find medical equipment I may need?
- Can the agency
give me references that are familiar with their services?
- Suggested questions
to ask references: Do you frequently refer patients to this agency? Are your
patients satisfied with this agency’s services? (if you are speaking to a physician)
Developed jointly
by the American Health Quality Association, the National Association for Home
Care and Hospice, the Visiting Nurses Associations of America, the American Association
for Home Care, the American Association of Homes and Services for the Aging, AARP,
the National Long Term Care Ombudsman Resource Center, and the Consumer Coalition
for Quality Health Care.
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