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Not wiping their feet or removing dirty shoes upon entering the home of the client. Never washing their hands. Not using clean latex gloves or using dirty latex gloves. Damaging the property of the patient and not reporting the damage to their employer. Padding the bills. Not even saying hello to the patient upon entering the home. Not say anything whenever they leave the patients home.

Scampi, one aide my nephew had told him he needed to pay for her gloves and she was from an agency. All she did was clean.
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Reply to JoAnn29
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All aides and Certified Nursing Assistants who work for agencies must be registered with the Board of Health in each state. Recertification takes place every two years. Aides go through training. You mentioned padding bills. Who pads the bills? The Aide? Gloves and PPE is provided by the agency or the aide will purchase herself. Aides must remain in shoes at all times. The shoes must be closed toe shoes. It sounds like someone is trying to make trouble for the aide in attendance. Gloves are discarded after each task.
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Reply to Scampie1
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This is not an employment forum, it's for caregivers to support other caregivers with caregiving issues so not sure this is the best forum to get proper feedback.

That being said, I'm trying to understand what you are asking: is the client (who hired the agency) making these false complaints against the aids? Or is the agency making the claim against their aid because the client complained?

If the client is very elderly, it's possible they have memory and cognitive impairment, and can also have paranoia which may cause them to complain about things that aren't accurate or true. If this is your case, this does happen. What you do about it... I'm not sure, outside of talking to a labor law attorney.
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Reply to Geaton777
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Are you asking if we, as caregivers, are seeing deficits in hired help? Then report it? And have the caregiver respond to agency that the client is more or less "impossible to please?"
I think that you will find that overall we ARE seeing this, just as those who are hiring nanny help, garden help, construction help and etc. find that the fields are full of spotty work. As someone who worked with new hire RNs in my hospital position often enough I can tell you that even RNs in costly private hospitals come in all forms: there's the good, the bad and the ugly, to be sure.

I think, if you consider it, an agency is a business that is hiring on, at great expense to the clients, workers who cannot honestly be fully vetted. I do not know what follow-up your average agency does on workers. For instance, do they send out any follow-up headed "Tell us your experience with our ageny's caregiver help", asking clients to report their individual experiences. I would imagine, after a certain number of complaints they let the "bad" help go. But consider this:
1. Caregivers are notoriously poorly paid
2. Caregivers are dealing with notoriously difficult and demanding clients and families
3. In our current economy there are many more choices for the caregivers than staying in a poorly paid position with lots of complaints.

Welcome to our imperfect world.
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Reply to AlvaDeer
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