Archive for the ‘Status’ Category

Today’s Business: 2011-11-03

Thursday, November 3rd, 2011

Today’s Activities

  • Shower. DONE.
  • Cat duty.  DONE.  Cat duty involves cleaning the litter boxes, bagging the excess, feeding, and house cleaning cat dirt of all types.
  • Wash (2) loads of pending laundry.   DONE.  174 loads done in the washer now.

Log

08:55 AM: I’m up.

09:05 AM: Facebooked for several minutes. Friend count: 596 (unchanged). Fan count: 112 (unchanged).

09:30 AM: Requested an estimate for sound-reducing windows for the house here from a second vendor.  Sent a reply letter to them, supplying the details for the project that they requested yesterday.

12:05 PM: Talked with   [Emmy].

02:30 PM: Watched today’s episode of   The Young and the Restless   via the DVR.

07:25 PM: Watched tonight’s episode of   NBC’s Nightly News   via the DVR.

08:15 PM: Watched today’s episode of    Dr. Phil,    called    Affairs, Lies, and Audiotape.

11:00 PM: Talked with   [Emmy].

11:30 PM: Continued working on the Tommy’s Tunes music library management software, to add recursive folder handling to the batch file processing scripts and programs.  Today, I completed this work on one of the conversion programs written in the C++ language.  There are two more of those, which should go easily, as the work I did for the first one is shared (in the form of a DLL library) by the others.  Then, there are my PERL scripts to enhance as well.  I’m hoping by the end of this month to complete this effort for all my programs.

11:55 PM: Downloaded approximately 100 new songs today from Promo Only’s  Express Audio music subscription service.  I’ll add all the ones I’ve downloaded over the past few months once I finish writing and testing the upgrades to my Tommy’s Tunes software.

12:05 AM: The daily traffic stats from yesterday for my blogs.  The monthly keyword hit count held steady this time, and currently stands at 913, down from 914 at last check.  The record high for this dimension remains at 1788.  The next goal: 2000.

12:10 AM: I’m headed to bed.  Good night, and I’ll write more tomorrow.

Tom Hesley

Received Mail and Shipments

None today.

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Today’s Business: 2011-11-02

Wednesday, November 2nd, 2011

Today’s Activities

  • Shower. DONE.
  • Cat duty.  DONE.  Cat duty involves cleaning the litter boxes, bagging the excess, feeding, and house cleaning cat dirt of all types.

Log

08:55 AM: I’m up.

09:05 AM: Facebooked for several minutes. Friend count: 596 (unchanged). Fan count: 112 (unchanged).

10:30 AM: Walked and jogged on the treadmill for an hour and five minutes, for walk 88 of 100 in 2011.  I walked and jogged approximately 4.1 miles.

01:30 PM: Worked on the Tommy’s Tunes music library management software, to recursive folder processing to the batch file processing scripts and programs.  Once this is finished, I should be able to add much more music in a given time to the library with far less manual effort.

04:30 PM: Worked the   Gutter Maintenance: 2011   project.  Cleaned more gutters today.

05:30 PM: Watched today’s episode of   The Young and the Restless   via the DVR.

07:25 PM: Watched tonight’s episode of   NBC’s Nightly News   via the DVR.

08:15 PM: Watched today’s episode of    Dr. Phil,    called    A Family Secret: A Brother’s Apology.

09:20 PM: Talked with   [Emmy].

10:40 PM: Watched   Star Trek,   the original series.  Episode:   By Any Other Name.

11:00 PM: I’m headed to bed.  Good night, and I’ll write more tomorrow.

12:05 AM: The daily traffic stats from yesterday for my blogs.  The monthly keyword hit count held steady this time, and currently stands at 914, which is the same as 914 at last check.  The record high for this dimension remains at 1788.  The next goal: 2000.

Tom Hesley

Received Mail and Shipments

None today.

Related Posts and Links

Mom’s Status: 2011-03-02

Wednesday, March 2nd, 2011

Sister Christine and I attended Mom’s care review and planning meeting today. It seemed very productive, and the staff is indeed aware now of the few concerns that we’ve had, and for the most part, they’re attempting to address them as best they can. Details below…

We learned that we can contact the Nursing Supervisor at any time, day or night, with questions about Mom’s care and status. That direct line telephone number is: xxx-xxx-xxxx.

For billing questions, we are to call CT at yyy-yyy-yyyy. I’ll probably be the one dealing most directly and most often with her.

This meeting consisted of representatives from several departments at the home that each contribute significantly to Mom’s overall care. Those include: Dietician, Pastoral Services, Physical and Occupational Therapies, Social Services, overall care planning, and Activities. Each of these groups accepted feedback from us regarding their particular areas of expertise and services rendered thus far, and they offered information about Mom that they’ve been accumulating since she became a resident there.  I’ll detail all of that that in the next paragraphs, organized by each department that spoke. 

Dietician

Mom’s eating roughly 50% of what they offer her. That goes for both fluids and solid foods. She often does not like what’s on the menu. But we were advised that she can order from an a-la-carte menu, a week ahead, so that more of the food that she enjoys is available come actual meal time. We need to make sure she’s ordered for the next week each time we visit.

Mom would like more salt to put on her food. They said though, that they do salt the food while cooking, so that little more (if any) is required at the table. However, they’ll see if Mom’s dietary restrictions will allow for at least a little extra salt.

They’d like her to consume 12 to 16 ounces of fluid per meal. But she’s currently only drinking about half of that. So they and we are encouraging her to try and drink more. 

Mom’s current weight is 166.8 pounds, and no areas are apparent that might indicate excessive skin pressures.  So that means that she’s not lying around in bed too much.  They do seem to be getting her up and about at least for several hours each day. 

Occupational Therapy

This group continues to work on Mom’s board transfers. However, they feel that she’s not strong enough to move herself across the transfer board from wheelchair to the toilet; although they assured us that   that is their goal   and that they’re encouraging her to work toward this as well. But her mid-body strength is very low and so, she can’t easily bend and twist herself the way one must, in order to accomplish these transfers routinely and safely.  She’s quite fearful of falling.  So, they’re taking steps to convince her that these board transfers are indeed safe enough to attempt.

Mom will not be able to receive hospice services until she’s no longer receiving the physical and occupational therapies at the home. So, under advice of the attending therapists, Mom wants to continue with the therapy for a while longer, though she won’t likely be authorized to receive it every day. It may just be a two or three times per week thing, as her skilled nursing and accompanying therapy authorizations ran out yesterday.

But these therapists are seeking further authorization from her medical insurance company.  If skilled therapies are not authorized further however, the home offers a restorative program; the charges for which are included in the daily rental rate for her room. This would not be as rigorous as what she’s been doing up to this point. But it’s a far cry better than nothing at all.

Activities

Mom does attend   some   activities — mostly table games and music groups. My impression was that they’d like to see her attend more, as Mom voiced that she “does not fit in.” She may have problems with assimilating into this new environment, given that most of the clients range anywhere from ten to thirty years older than Mom.  She may in fact, be the youngest one there, but has health problems that normally do not occur until a person is significantly older.  This troubles her and likely confuses some of the staff; especially the ones who do not read her whole chart before administering care.   So we’re hopeful that visits from her friends who, are more her own age, will help cheer her up, and that the staff will care for her with greater sensitivity now that we’ve made them aware of this issue.  These are mainly just settling-in issues that I’m confident will disappear once the personnel there all come to know Mom. 

Pastoral Services

The woman pastor has visited Mom a few times since Mom’s inception, and encouraged Mom to seek her out anytime she needs to talk, about ANYthing.  She seemed to like Mom, thought Mom has a keen mind, and she felt that she could help Mom deal with the myriad of questions Mom’s trying to answer for herself about this new and daunting stage of her life. 

Social Services

I submitted the power of attorney papers.

Also, the Wifi installation at the home will not support Netflix movie downloads onto Mom’s Internet-ready TV. Apparently they do not have the necessary bandwidth for that. But they do offer regular cable TV as well as a Wifi access point for guests (so long as they’re not watching Netflix movies), free of charge. We asked for this password and they’re obtaining that for us.

They advised me to continue my work with the county assistance office, to file the Asset Protection form, which may allow us to retain some of Mom’s monthly pension money for incidentals, telephone, and other recurring expenses. I’ll know more about that tomorrow.

We will not actually apply for Medical Assistance payments until Mom’s total asset amount falls below $16,000.

Care Planning

Mom is currently taking three meds for depression, and her protines ( that drive how fast her blood clots) are checked on an ad hoc bases as the doctor sees fit.  She was due for another test today.

Her current physician does not visit this particular home. So she’ll have to pick a doctor who does. We’ve asked for a list of all doctors who work that home to help her decide.

We told them that we expect Mom to remain at the home indefinitely barring some miraculous recovery. The reps clearly indicated that they understand this. Before this meeting, there seemed to be questions about that when I talked with the social worker yesterday. But it’s all straightened out now.

They informed us that we will be notified any time they make changes to Mom’s meds. Any questions about meds can be raised with Mom’s charge nurse or, if that person cannot be reached, the nursing supervisor can supply the most up-to-date information.

Mom raised concern about how some of the staff is treating her. Christine and I felt that these staff were probably just not made aware of the extreme weakness in Mom’s legs before serving her for the first time. So, they may have been leaning a little too much on her to get up and about, not really knowing the extent of her disability. The therapist there agreed to put notes in Mom’s chart and to personally inform all the parties that work with Mom about her rather unique and unusually advanced polyneuropathy situation. Hopefully, they’ll avoid ribbing her as much for not standing after this.

Additionally, they suggested that “the workers tend to be gruff” where Mom is, and offered to move her to a different part of the building, where workers are “softer,” as they called them.

I objected though, saying that Mom should not have to give up her nice room because someone in that immediate area is mistreating her. In fact, if moved, Mom would have to sacrifice her private-room status (quite probably forever) and have to share living quarters.

The notion was offered that this may simply be a matter of “style” or “personality” of the workers, clashing with Mom’s, and that this might be solved by putting Mom with different caregivers.  But in order to preserve continuity of care for patients throughout the various areas of the home, they typically do not circulate staff around.  It would be far easier therefore, they said, to move Mom than to juggle staff around to different positions.

But I feel that compassion should not be confined to only   some  of the areas of the building. Specifically, Mom should not be made to feel like a burden when she has to go to the bathroom,   no matter where   she resides in the complex. If one area is “nicer” than another, then that’s an administrative issue that they need to address  not   by simply having Mom give up perhaps the best bedroom in the facility.

They did say that if Mom feels neglected or otherwise mistreated where she is, that she can always let the nursing supervisor know. I told Mom that if workers treat her gruffly, then she needs to develop a thick skin and just ask for the supervisor if they won’t do what she needs. She has a cell phone too and can call one of us if she ever feels abandoned, and we can be out there in fifteen to twenty minutes if need be.  The reps assured us that we have every right to expect that Mom’s requests be fulfilled in a timely manner, without any negativity in attitudes, abruptness, sighing, expressions of disgust or impatience, and out-in-the-hall whispering.

We assured Mom that the decision of where to room is ultimately up to her.  But I did advise her that she has it pretty darn good where she is, and that sacrificing her privacy (again, probably forever) in order to get more gentle workers is probably not worth it. If they’re mean, I told her, you just calmly ask for the supervisor.

Again though, these tensions may no longer be issues once the therapists communicate the full extent of Mom’s malady to all involved workers. As her family and friends, we can also help by making sure when we’re up there that the nurses are treating her accordingly for her condition.

All in all, this was a highly beneficial and reassuring meeting for both the staff there and us, and the Oreo cookies were delicious. :-) Christine seemed to like the coffee too.

Tom Hesley

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Mom’s Status: 2011-01-22

Saturday, January 22nd, 2011

Summary

As last week, I have but modest improvements to report this week.  Mom has been transferred to the nursing facility from the hospital early last week in an effort to give her more extensive physical therapy. She says she’s feeling somewhat stronger; though the therapist at the nursing faciluty was amazed that Mom had become so weak since November, when she last worked with her. Though Mom still sounds “flat” and resigned, she received visits from several of her friends, and this made her happy.   But she still spends much of her day either sleeping or feeling sad.  Hopefully, she’ll turn the corner on this illness soon. 

Some good news: Her urinary tract infection (UTI) has been erradicated, and so far, there are no signs of a return.  Mom also go her trans esophigal echo cardiogram just before leaving the hospital.  It showed no progress of endocarditis.  So it’s likely that she never really had this.     

However, her vision problems continue (halos around objects in her view and extreme sensitivity to light).  We’still holding on this issue until her more immediate concerns (building her upper body strength back up) have been addressed.   

Mom was seen this week by a staff neurologist, to help determine why her lower body strength decreased so drastically since late July.  However, Mom refused a spinal tap, that would have enabled the doctors to get a better picture of what might have happened to her during that time.  Apparently, Mom is squeamish about needles going into her back.  She says that she’s content not knowing the exact cause of her current inability to use her legs.  Nonetheless, we’re still wishing that Mom gets home in time to keep her appointment with her regular  neurologist in early February, as we still do not know what sort of nerve damage she has (if any) and what her prognosis for recovery from it is.  He may be able to tell her something more with other less invasive tests than the spinal tap.   

She’s been allocated a week initially by her medical insurance company for working with the physical therapists at the nursing facility to strengthen her arms, upper back, and chest muscles.  But we still do not know when she’ll be coming home, as they may extend that time if they believe that she’s improving but not yet improved enough to return home.  She still appears too weak to live here, and I’m not  sure coming home is her objective at this point, because being here means much work for her with at least eight transfers a day; getting to and from her wheelchair, her bed, and such.  She may want to return here more if she gets stronger in the coming week or two. 

Tom Hesley

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Mom’s Status: 2011-01-15

Saturday, January 15th, 2011

Summary

There are just modest improvements to report this week.  Mom is still an inpatient at the hospital.  She’ll have been there for three weeks very soon. However, she says she’s feeling a bit stronger, and her physical therapist agreed. Though she still sounds “flat” and resigned, she received visits from several of her friends, and this seemed to relieve her indifference, temporarily at least.  So her mood may be a little better.  But she still spends much of her day either sleeping or feeling sad.  It’s heartbreaking to see. 

She is still dealing with that urinary tract infection (UTI),  finishing one course of antibiotics this week.  We’re waiting to see if the infection returns in the absence of the antibiotics. So far, so good.  It has not.  But too few days have passed to tell yet if this pesky bug is completely gone from her system.   

Her vision problems continue (halos around objects in her view and extreme sensitivity to light).  She saw an eye doctor this week, and he feels that she needs some laser surgery to correct the trouble, but apparently feels she’s not in any danger of permanent sight loss if she does not have the surgery right away.  She can’t have it immediately, because her medical insurance company will not cover it; not when she’s in the hospital for something totally unrelated (the UTI).  So, she must wait until she leaves the hospital before she can pursue the eye correction.   

She will be unable to have her echo cardiogram test next week that we had scheduled last December.  At that time, she was an outpatient and so, we arranged the test for her AS an outpatient.  But now that she’s an inpatient, they must reschedule the test. Curious that they couldn’t go ahead with this sincee he test was to be performed at the very same hospital where she’s staying now.  But that’s our health care system for you. 

We’re hoping that Mom gets home in time to keep her appointment with the neurologist in early February, as we still do not know what sort of nerve damage she has (if any) and what her prognosis for recovery from it is.  This guy is in high demand, is perhaps the only one serving this immediate area, and so, he’s very hard to see quickly. 

We still do not know when she’ll be coming home.  In fact, it’s likely that she’ll go back to the nursing facility in the coming days for another round of physical therapy.  She’s still too weak to live here, and I’m not even sure she wants to come home at this point because being here means lots of work for her, getting to and from her wheelchair, her bed, and such.  She may feel differently once she goes through another round of PT. 

Log

03:00 PM: Nothing significant occurred today. 

Tom Hesley

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Disabling Post Revisions: WordPress 3.0.4

Saturday, January 15th, 2011

I discovered that WordPress was again saving every revision of every post after I upgraded the   Tom’s Views   blog to WordPress 3.0.4, though I had disabled this feature during the last WordPress upgrade.  Click   here   for more details.  But apparently, in this latest version, the automatic retention of these revisions became enabled once more. So I turned off this feature by commenting out line 4404 in the wp-includes/post.php file as follows:

Line 4404 was:

          if ( ! WP_POST_REVISIONS )

but now, it’s:

        // if ( ! WP_POST_REVISIONS )

Then I deleted all the revisions that had been saved to this point since applying the WordPress upgrade from each blog database, by executing the following SQL statement:

DELETE FROM wp_posts WHERE post_type = “revision”;

I then logged out and back into each site’s admin id and verified that the revisions saved thus far no longer appear on the Edit Post screen. The deletion apparently worked.   These instructions have now been verified to work with WordPress 3.0.2.

That’s all.

Tom Hesley

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Mom’s Status: 2011-01-06

Thursday, January 6th, 2011

Summary

Mom’s had a rough go of it the past two months.  She came home in early November, but unfortunately was regaining much of her upper body strength that she had prior to this latest stint of hospital visits that began in late July, 2010.  She’s discouraged however, that neither physical nor occupational therapy produced continued improvement in her ability to get around the house on her own. 

Further, she’s been coping with a urinary tract infection (UTI) since returning home.  Complications from this sent her back to the hospital on Christmas Eve. 

She came home again three days later with more abdominal pain than before the hospitalization, and noticably less upper body strength.  At this time, she’s not able to reliably transfer herself from bed to wheelchair to easy chair, and I can only lift her so many times before my back starts hurting.  Apparently, the attendents did not verify Mom’s physical abilities before sending her home.  So she had to go back to (a different) hospital a day or so later. 

She’s also developed some vision problems (halos around objects in her view and extreme sensitivity to light).  She’s seeing her eye doctor about this. 

There’s been much speculation as to what caused the disappearance of her lower body strength.  Some professionals say it could have been a spinal stroke (a stroke of the spine).  Others suggest that the diabetic neuropathy that’s plagued her for over a decade may have suddenly accelerated and expanded to include not just the sensory (feeling) nerves, but also the skeleto-muscular nerves (those that drive the muscles in her legs).   Then of course, there’s also the original belief that a pelvic hemotoma damaged her nerves.  However, no one in the know in these matters has said specifically what triggered her loss of leg use.  They really don’t know for sure. 

Mom has an appointment with the neurologist in early February.  Coordination problems with her transport service made it impossible to get her to his office before this time.     

We have no idea when she’ll be coming home.  In fact, she may have to return to the nursing facility in the coming days for another round of physical therapy.  She’s not strong enough at present to live here, I’m sorry to say. 

Completed Objectives

  • Call Mom’s insurance company and find out what sorts of in-home rehab visits they cover — how many of them over how long of a period.  Sister Mary Ann recommends that we spread these out over the entire coverage period, and not use them all immediately.  The nursing facility is handling all this for us.
  • Track the dissipation of Mom’s pelvic hematoma. 

Log

09:15 PM: Nothing significant occurred today. 

Tom Hesley

Related Posts

Disabling Post Revisions: WordPress 3.0.3

Saturday, December 11th, 2010

I discovered that WordPress was again saving every revision of every post after I upgraded the   Tom’s Views   blog to WordPress 3.0.3, though I had disabled this feature during the last WordPress upgrade.  Click   here   for more details.  But apparently, in this latest version, the automatic retention of these revisions became enabled once more. So I turned off this feature by commenting out line 4404 in the wp-includes/post.php file as follows:

Line 4404 was:

          if ( ! WP_POST_REVISIONS )

but now, it’s:

        // if ( ! WP_POST_REVISIONS )

Then I deleted all the revisions that had been saved to this point since applying the WordPress upgrade from each blog database, by executing the following SQL statement:

DELETE FROM wp_posts WHERE post_type = “revision”;

I then logged out and back into each site’s admin id and verified that the revisions saved thus far no longer appear on the Edit Post screen. The deletion apparently worked.   These instructions have now been verified to work with WordPress 3.0.2.

That’s all.

Tom Hesley

Related Posts

Today’s Business: 2010-12-04

Saturday, December 4th, 2010

Today’s Activities

  • Shower.  DONE.
  • Cat duty.  DONE.
  • Wash all (2) pending loads of laundry.

Log

09:30 AM: I’m up.  Today looks overcast with occasional bursts of sunshine, with temperatures ranging in the low thirties this morning.  No rain or snow is falling at present.

10:30 AM: Sister Mary Ann called to say that she’s coming to visit Mom later today and that she may have found some cheaper alternatives for some of Mom’s meds.  Hey, we’ll take any help we can find.  :-)   These meds are quite costly at present. 

11:15 AM: Updated all blogs (including:  Tom’s Diary,   Tom’s Love Quest,   Tom’s Views,   and   WPSBC Alumni Association)   to   WordPress 3.0.2.  No problems with either the installation or subsequent blog behavior noted. 

11:45 AM: Posted the   Disabling Post Revisions: WordPress 3.0.2   piece. 

01:00 PM: Completed the weekly web site backups.  Details   here.

05:00 PM: Worked the   Christmas Lighting: 2010   project. 

05:45 PM: Sister Mary Ann arrived, bearing a very tasty supper gift; lasagna.  Mmmmmm!

07:00 PM: Sisters Christine and Diane arrived as well and sister Jojo came later on, and we all hung out in the sitting room with Mom for an hour or so, until it was time for sister Mary Ann to take Catie and Jess to a Christmas show at the Mishler Theater in Altoona.

07:05 PM: Now,   [Emmy]   and I are listening to the Penguins hockey game.  They’re playing the Columbus Blue Jackets this evening. 

07:30 PM: Washed all linens on Mom’s bed (we do this each Saturday). 

10:00 PM: The Pens beat the Blue Jackets, 7 to 2.  I napped a bit during the game in the front room (our new spare bedroom. 

12:35 AM: Watched the 2010-11-14 episode of CBS’s   60 Minutes   news show on the DVR.  I most enjoyed the story about the pros and cons of extracting natural gas from shale here in the US and how this could potentially solve our energy problems for the next twenty years or more.  But they also explored some of the risks of this process, including contaminated drinking water.  Good show. 

01:30 AM: Sat with Mom for an hour in her sitting room to keep her company.  I worry about her back there all by herself for so much of the time, just sitting and watching television.  But she had lots of company today.  So perhaps she considered her solitude afterward pleasurable. 

02:00 AM: Helped Mom to bed.  I’m now going to bed as well.  So good night.  More tomorrow. 

Tom Hesley

Received Mail and Shipments

None today.

Related Posts

Disabling Post Revisions: WordPress 3.0.2

Saturday, December 4th, 2010

I discovered that WordPress was again saving every revision of every post after I upgraded the   Tom’s Views   blog to WordPress 3.0.2, though I had disabled this feature during the last WordPress upgrade.  Click   here   for more details.  But apparently, in this latest version, the automatic retention of these revisions became enabled once more. So I turned off this feature by commenting out line 4404 in the wp-includes/post.php file as follows:

Line 4404 was:

          if ( ! WP_POST_REVISIONS )

but now, it’s:

        // if ( ! WP_POST_REVISIONS )

Then I deleted all the revisions that had been saved to this point from each blog database by executing the following SQL statement:

DELETE FROM wp_posts WHERE post_type = “revision”;

I then logged out and back into each site’s admin id and verified that the revisions saved thus far no longer appear on the Edit Post screen. The deletion apparently worked.   These instructions have now been verified to work with WordPress 3.0.2.

That’s all.

Tom Hesley

Related Posts