10 Questions to Ask When Hiring a Home Healthcare Agency

10 Questions to Ask When Hiring a Home Healthcare AgencyMaybe you need to hire a home healthcare worker to assist a loved one struggling with Alzheimer’s Disease. Perhaps you want a home healthcare worker to be there to help mom and dad as they age. Or maybe it’s to help a family member recovering from a serious injury. Whatever the case, in-home care plays an important role in healthcare, but with many horror stories in the news about home care workers taking advantage of and even abusing their patients, what can you do to ensure the agency you are hiring is honest, experienced and will provide the right care?

Kurt Kazanowski, a hospice, homecare and senior care expert, who is author of A Son’s Journey: Taking Care of Mom and Dad, says to make sure and ask these 10 questions during the interview:

1. How long has the agency been providing private duty home care? Insist on meeting the home care worker who will be reporting to your home, and get at least three references from patients this person has previously cared for.
2. Is a written, customized care plan developed in consultation with the client and family members, and is the plan updated as changes occur?
3. How are emergencies handled after normal business hours?
4. Does the agency closely supervise the quality of care, including maintenance of a daily journal in the client’s home and non-scheduled supervisory visits?
5. Does the agency employ a nurse, social worker or other qualified professionals to make regular visits to the client’s home?
6. Does the agency provide a written document that states the rights of the patient and the responsibilities of the client, and explains the company’s privacy policy and code of ethics?
7. Does the agency triple-screen their caregiver employees carefully, including use of reference checks, driving records and criminal background investigations?
8. Does the agency mandate ongoing training of its employees to continually update their skills?
9. Does the agency manage all payroll and employee-related matters and adhere to state and federal guidelines in its employment practices, such as withholding appropriate taxes and providing workers’ compensation and other benefits?
10. Does the agency also use independent contractors? If so, who employs the person and what type of background checks do they do on these contractors? Also, who pays the mandated taxes and withholding?

“These important questions will provide a better and more critical view of what to expect from a personal home care company,” Kazanowski says. “A thorough review of the answers will give you an idea of the caliber of care that they will provide to your loved ones. Interview several companies and compare answers because not all home care companies are created equal.”

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Comments

  1. Jo-Ann Brightman says

    These are all important questions and some of them I would not have thought to ask without these tips. We had different home health aides for our mothers, but most of them were recommended by doctors.

  2. I would never have come up with these important and critical questions on my own so this is a valuable resource to have a hand when needed. Good to have the information before hand instead of when it becomes an emergency situation.

  3. Great questions and it pays to ask. It is tough leaving someone you love in the care of others . I think the question if they use independent contractors is one people forget. I do think at times, if a care worker is just starting out, there might not be 3 references, but usually there is. I know I moonlighted doing homecare when I worked in group homes. It was nice work, and I will always remember Ruthie (she was 102!) I had her as I worked with her great grandson in one of the group homes and knew the family that way.

  4. Tamra Phelps says

    Since my Mom had a lot of medical issues over the last several years, we’ve had a lot of home health nurses & physical therapists. Most have been great. But the list of questions above are definitely things you have to consider.