That is so good and well researched !
Best Wishes
 
 
In a message dated 6/9/2011 11:49:40 A.M. Central Daylight Time,  
[email protected] writes:

 
Here  are some steps and resources you can utilize when hiring a care 
assistant to  minimize your potential adverse risk:  
·          Use  a separate email address to conduct your care assistant 
screening and hiring.  You can get a free web based email account at Gmail.com, 
Yahoo.com, etc. Do  not include your full real name. You can also get a 
free separate phone number  with voice mail at Google Voice to assist with your 
screenings instead of  using your home phone number. 
·          Screen  applicants by phone to reiterate the employment terms 
(wage, days, hours,  requirements) and duties and determine if they are still 
interested and  whether you want to interview them. If you do call an 
applicant, you can dial  *67 prior to dialing their phone number to block your 
information from  displaying on their caller id. I only provide my first name 
to applicants  during the screening process. 
·          Interview  applicants at a neutral location. I meet them at the 
food court in the local  mall, setting up multiple interviews 15-20 minutes  
apart. 
·          Have  your interview questions prepared in advance and record 
your  thoughts/reactions and assign a score of 1-10 after each interview for 
later  reference. Ask for and verify at least 3 references. 
·          Utilize  a background check service for applicants you consider 
hiring. There are quite  a few online. Most charge a flat fee for one search 
and higher fees for  multiple searches over specified time spans. This is 
definitely worth the  money. It may not catch every past offender, but it has 
helped prevent me from  hiring applicants with in some cases multiple 
criminal offenses. A free search  is available at:

_http://criminalsearches.com/_ (http://criminalsearches.com/)  
·          Do  not disclose your home address until you hire someone. You 
can give a general  area when discussing possible commuting distances. 
FYI,  I live in a fairly small town and the last time I hired a care 
assistant I had  over 75 inquiries, spoke to at least 50 of them, and set up 20 
interviews over  a 2 day period. Only 12 of the 20 scheduled interviewees 
actually showed up  (very typical). I would have considered offering the job to 
5 of them. My  first choice accepted the job and worked for me for a year. 
My second choice  accepted afterword (I retained her info) and still works 
for me more than a  year later.  
Once  you offer the job and the applicant accepts, I suggest the  
following: 
·          Establish  a trial work period of 1-2 weeks and assess how 
things are going at the end of  the trial for both of you. Terminate employment 
if concerns  exist. 
·          This  may seem harsh or paranoid, but assume that they may steal 
from you. Hide or  lock up your meds, valuables, and any information that 
could be used to steal  your identity. Tell them you have and use nanny cams 
even if you do not have  them. 

·          Have  a check list of required duties and review/revise the 
checklist quarterly or  at least annually to ensure both you and your care 
assistant know and  understand what is expected. 
If  care assistants are hard to find in your area, you may need to try a  
combination of Craigslist and newspaper ads, seeking applicants at your local 
 college's nursing program, and word of mouth.  
It  can take a lot of work to hire a reliable care assistant, but doing 
your due  diligence can significantly reduce the potential for theft or worse.  
 
Steve  - C4, 23 years  
 
 
From: Berres, Susan J  *HS [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Thursday, June  09, 2011 11:27 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject:  [QUAD-L] Caregivers

Hello, 
I'm  an occupational therapist at a pediatric rehab facility.  I've been  
mostly lurking on this list for years, picking up great tips and ideas for  
many of the SCI patients I treat - many thanks for all the wealth of 
knowledge  you all share so freely. 
I  write/edit a newsletter that is sent out to all of our former SCI  
patients.  We're a children's hospital, but after all these years most of  our 
former patients have become  adults, so we gear the newsletter  to that 
demographic.  We had a request to do a newsletter on the topic of  caregivers - 
how to get them, how to keep them, how to treat them,  etc. 
We  have articles from places like Paralyzed Veterans of America about the 
basics  of hiring aides, etc, but we like to go a little deeper in our  
newsletters.  I figure that our readership has been dealing with this  stuff 
for 
years and probably knows more about it than we do in many  respects.  I am 
wondering if anyone in this group would be willing to  share 
thoughts/resources/tips, etc that go beyond the basics. 
Many  thanks for any help you can offer! 
Sue  Berres, OTR/L 


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