For anyone living at an assisted living or skilled nursing facility, a care plan (for skilled nursing) or service plan (for assisted living) is required to promote resident health and wellbeing.
This comprehensive plan details all aspects of how a resident's care will be delivered. It guides the staff in rendering care tailored to the resident.
Step 1 – The Assessment
The creation of a care/service plan starts before a resident's official admittance to the facility. Though in some cases, it takes place on move-in day. The new resident, their family, and the facility staff participate in a meeting known as a Care Conference to assess the required level of care. Among the areas covered in the assessment are:
Much of the assessment focuses on the Activities of Daily Living (ADLs). These are fundamental activities a person should be able to do independently. An inability to handle one or more ADLs often drives the decision to move to a senior living situation.
The two types of ADLs included in the assessment are Basic and Instrumental.
Instrumental ADLs (IADLs) are higher-level activities that a person does on their own living at home. An IADL assessment is typically more applicable for assisted living. They include:
After collecting all the information, the facility staff drafts a detailed plan that addresses all assessment areas. Input to the plan ideally should come from multiple professionals such as nurses, dietitians, social workers, therapists, activities staff, and anyone else involved with the resident's care.
The plan draft then needs to be discussed with the resident and the resident's family. This serves two purposes. First, the family can determine if all areas of concern have been addressed. Second, it serves to educate the resident and family and set expectations about how care will be delivered. The goal is to avoid any communication lapses that would lead to future problems with the resident's care.
Step 2 – Ongoing Care Conferences
The care or service plan is a living document. It needs to be updated on a set schedule or as the resident's needs change. Follow-up Care Conferences are often the forum for reviewing the plan. Residents and their families must be prepared to ask questions, so no concerns are overlooked.
Questions to Ask
Residents and their families should thoroughly understand how the facility will address the resident's care needs. In both the initial Care Conference and subsequent meetings, it helps to prepare a list of questions. Below are some examples:
Questions for the Initial Assessment
Questions for Follow-Up Care Conferences
The Care Plan is the number one tool used to describe what the optimal care should be for the resident. It sets mutually agreed-upon expectations for the resident, their family, and the facility staff, so everyone shares the same vision for the resident's optimal level of care.
Visit our Long-term Care Resources page for more helpful content about planning for care!