Fasttrack home supports older adults and caregivers during pandemic
With a full-time job, three grandchildren to look after and an elderly father to care for, Shelley’s plate was full. When her father, Wayne, 82, was admitted to the hospital and diagnosed with heart issues and COPD complications, it threw her for a loop.
While he was in the hospital, the family’s situation worsened. It was discovered that Wayne was COVID-positive and, without realizing it, had passed it to Shelley.
Shelley’s required quarantine period meant she would be unable to care for her father as he was being discharged home from the hospital. She worried about his meals, cleaning and personal care. “It was a very stressful and desperate time for me,” Shelley remembers.
Council on Aging’s (COA) FastTrack Home program, now available through Warren County’s Elderly Services Program, provided support to help Wayne recover safely at home.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, when nursing facilities have been hot spots for outbreaks and even deaths, COA secured federal funding to support FastTrack Home’s expansion into Warren County. The program has been used by hospitals to divert more than 1,800 older adults away from nursing and rehab facilities, to instead receive support in their homes where potential exposure to COVID-19 is greatly reduced. The program has been available in Clinton and Hamilton counties since 2017.
FastTrack Home sets up temporary in-home care services (such as transportation, meals, personal care and homemaking services) before an older adult goes home from the hospital. While other COA programs require an in-home assessment and focus on meeting long-term needs, FastTrack Home assessments are completed at the hospital bedside and are designed to meet short-term, acute needs. This distinction is key because older adults have an increased risk of illness and injury in the 30 days following discharge form a care facility. With a speedy assessment and enrollment process, FastTrack Home services can be in place when the patient is discharged home.
In Wayne’s case, Savannah, one of COA’s FastTrack Home hospital coaches, worked with the hospital to make sure Wayne was not discharged over a weekend – when services are more difficult to arrange. She also arranged for an emergency food delivery the day Wayne arrived home and had regular home-delivered meals started the very next day. Within five days of Wayne’s return home, a home health aide began visiting to help with personal care and housekeeping issues.
Wayne’s FastTrack Home services are provided by COA through Warren County’s Elderly Services Program. His services are temporary and designed to support a safe recovery at home. Before Wayne’s FastTrack Home services end (a maximum of 60 days), he will receive a full evaluation for the Elderly Services Program or other Council on Aging programs. This ensures continuity of care for older adults who need assistance beyond FastTrack Home’s 60-day window.
Shelley is very grateful for FastTrack Home – the support it offered her father and the peace of mind it brought to her. “Without FastTrack Home,” she says, “I don’t know what would have happened.”
While he was in the hospital, the family’s situation worsened. It was discovered that Wayne was COVID-positive and, without realizing it, had passed it to Shelley.
Shelley’s required quarantine period meant she would be unable to care for her father as he was being discharged home from the hospital. She worried about his meals, cleaning and personal care. “It was a very stressful and desperate time for me,” Shelley remembers.
Council on Aging’s (COA) FastTrack Home program, now available through Warren County’s Elderly Services Program, provided support to help Wayne recover safely at home.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, when nursing facilities have been hot spots for outbreaks and even deaths, COA secured federal funding to support FastTrack Home’s expansion into Warren County. The program has been used by hospitals to divert more than 1,800 older adults away from nursing and rehab facilities, to instead receive support in their homes where potential exposure to COVID-19 is greatly reduced. The program has been available in Clinton and Hamilton counties since 2017.
FastTrack Home sets up temporary in-home care services (such as transportation, meals, personal care and homemaking services) before an older adult goes home from the hospital. While other COA programs require an in-home assessment and focus on meeting long-term needs, FastTrack Home assessments are completed at the hospital bedside and are designed to meet short-term, acute needs. This distinction is key because older adults have an increased risk of illness and injury in the 30 days following discharge form a care facility. With a speedy assessment and enrollment process, FastTrack Home services can be in place when the patient is discharged home.
In Wayne’s case, Savannah, one of COA’s FastTrack Home hospital coaches, worked with the hospital to make sure Wayne was not discharged over a weekend – when services are more difficult to arrange. She also arranged for an emergency food delivery the day Wayne arrived home and had regular home-delivered meals started the very next day. Within five days of Wayne’s return home, a home health aide began visiting to help with personal care and housekeeping issues.
Wayne’s FastTrack Home services are provided by COA through Warren County’s Elderly Services Program. His services are temporary and designed to support a safe recovery at home. Before Wayne’s FastTrack Home services end (a maximum of 60 days), he will receive a full evaluation for the Elderly Services Program or other Council on Aging programs. This ensures continuity of care for older adults who need assistance beyond FastTrack Home’s 60-day window.
Shelley is very grateful for FastTrack Home – the support it offered her father and the peace of mind it brought to her. “Without FastTrack Home,” she says, “I don’t know what would have happened.”