My husband suffered a stroke in October, he's been in hospital since, but has been ready for rehab at home for about a month though he is still paralysed on his right side and can't swallow properly so needs to be fed through a PEG seven times a day. Someone at the hospital forgot to process his paperwork, so by mid December, nothing had been done. On the Friday I was told there is a chance of him coming home on the Monday, most likely Tuesday or Wednesday. On the Monday I got a phone call from the hospital around 10. 30 to say he'll be home 12-15. Another call just after 12. 00, and he was here in less than 10 minutes.
It was blowing with a gale, he was dressed in a short sleeve tshirt, sweatpants, no socks, no blanket. He had a chest infection and a UTI, no meds for either, no carers, no nurse. On Friday he had a nasty reaction to the antibiotic prescribed by the on-call doctor and is now back in hospital.
When I called to ask what time he should have his food and meds, I was told to look at the side of the medicine bottles. When I asked what time he'd had food and meds and which meds and how much food, I was told to look at the side of the bottles as 'all the information is there'. I was given no training to administer his meds which include Warfarin and no one else was arranged to do this.
The ambulance crew told me the carers would arrive around 14. 00. By 14. 45 no one had even called. I had no names or contact details for anyone, no information on anything, in fact, so had to call the discharge team to ask if anyone at all was going to arrive. Around 18. 00 carers turned up.
After he was re-admitted, I had a call from one of the wards to ask me what dose of Warfarin he is on. When I pointed out to the nurse that in fact I could be anyone and say anything, her only comment was 'well we'd like to think you wouldn't'. She had no access to medical records or the anticoagulation team records. The ward he's on now wasn't aware that he had only just left the hospital after a four month stay.
There's not much to say that is positive about his treatment since, either. It doesn't appear that anyone talks to anyone else at the hospital and there are way too many managers and not enough people to do the actual work. If there were good managers doing a decent job, then they probably would not have run out of pillows and towels and patients wouldn't be dumped out of the door with no clothes on their backs at Christmas time. A member of the discharge team did turn up at my husband's bedside to tell me that there was nothing wrong with the way he was discharged and that it was all done according to protocol.
"Poor discharge for my husband"
About: Kettering General Hospital / General medicine Kettering General Hospital General medicine NN16 8UZ Northamptonshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust Northamptonshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust Kettering NN15 7PW
Posted by Grumpy Old Woman (as ),
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Update posted by Grumpy Old Woman (a relative) 9 years ago
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