The last couple of years have taught me a lot about Parkinson’s disease and hospitals. It’s a little strange to realize it, but the people who work in hospitals don’t really see much of Parkinson’s. It’s not a condition that usually requires hospitalization. On the other hand, it’s a disease that frequently causes other conditions that do land you in a hospital bed. Falls can break bones, particularly hip bones, and swallowing difficulties can create aspiration pneumonia. These, along with other infections and injuries, can result in you–the PD patient–finding yourself in a hospital ward focused on surgery, trauma, infectious disease, or respiratory conditions, and treated by a staff lacking specific knowledge for treating PD. Another complicating factor is that your PD is a very personalized condition. No two patients have the same medications requirements. Add to that the fact that your medication requirements will be changing because of the stress load of the current condition, and you realize that no one in the surgical team or the recovery room is going to become a PD expert in the time available. So unless you are able to bring your neurologist or movement disorders specialist with you to the hospital, you–and your care-partner–must learn to look out for yourselves.
I, ______________, live with Parkinson’s disease (PD).
It is a condition that is unique to me. My prescription medications
are essential to the management of my PD symptoms. The
medications I take are very specific, and cannot be substituted for
with similar drugs or generic look-alikes.
The timing and dosages of these medications is crucial. Any
deviations from my normal routine will exaggerate or exacerbate
my Parkinson’s symptoms and may confuse the treatment of my
current condition. Certain foods and timing of meals may interfere
with the efficacy of my PD medications.
I will manage my own PD medications, both dosage and timing.
I will bring my medications with me (the Pharmacist may wish to
inventory them.)
I will assist all hospital staff to coordinate my PD medications with
both current treatment and food schedules.
Patient ____________________________
Doctor ____________________________
Date_______________________________
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What’s in the Kit? FREE
Aware in Care Kit Pack your bag with your Parkinson’s medication and materials below. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | |
Hospital Action PlanRead about how to prepare for your next hospital visit—whether it is planned or an emergency. http://www.awareincare.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/12/Hospital-Action-Plan.pdf ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | |
Parkinson’s Disease ID Bracelet
Wear your bracelet at all times in case you are in an emergency situation and cannot communicate.
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Medication Form Complete this form and keep copies in your kit for use at the hospital. If you download the form, you can fill it out on your computer before you print it out.
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Share the facts about Parkinson’s with hospital staff and ask that a copy be placed in your chart.
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I Have Parkinson’s Reminder Slips Share vital information about Parkinson’s disease with every member of your careteam in the hospital. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | |
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Magnet Use this magnet to display a copy of your Medication Form in your hospital. http://www.awareincare.org/whats-in-the-kit/ |
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