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AVOIDING Attendants from HELL: A Practical Guide to Finding, Hiring & Keeping Personal Care Attendants. 2nd Edition (Paperback)

AVOIDING Attendants from HELL: A Practical Guide to Finding, Hiring & Keeping Personal Care Attendants. 2nd Edition Cover Image
By Barry Whitesell (Illustrator), June Price
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Description


At some point in our lives, we will all experience the limitations of a disability. Be it a broken bone, stroke or genetic disease, we may need assistance performing those everyday tasks often taken for granted: bathing, brushing our teeth, tying our shoes.Fortunately, most people recover from their injuries and regain full independence.Others, however, are not as lucky.AVOIDING Attendants from HELL- A Practical Guide to Finding, Hiring & Keeping Personal Care Attendants is a how-to guide for those who require life-long assistance with personal care and daily living tasks due to a physical disability.Although these individuals may never be able to go without help, they can learn to manage their care, allowing a greater degree of independence. Toward this end, the disabled individual must learn how to find, hire and keep those paid to assist them: the Personal Care Attendant.The book's author, June Price, has required personal care assistance since birth due to spinal muscular atrophy, a rare neuromuscular disease. Since moving into her first apartment in 1980, she has maintained an independent lifestyle. Her experience managing part-time and live-in help is documented in this clear, concise guide.AVOIDING Attendants from HELL - A Practical Guide to Finding, Hiring & Keeping Personal Care Attendants is a "must read" book for anyone who requires personal assistance services.

About the Author


June Price was born in 1947 with spinal muscular atrophy, type II (SMA-II), a rare, neuromuscular disease. Never able to walk, she relies on a power chair and needs assistance with all her personal care. June lived with her parents until February, 1980, at which time she became one of the first physically disabled adults in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, to move into a wheelchair accessible, low-income apartment complex for disabled and elderly people. Initially, June only needed PCAs to come in for her care morning and night, as she was able to man-age on her own during the day (albeit with tremen-dous effort). These workers were neighborhood woman with small children who welcomed cash payments and short work hours. She met toileting needs with an external, urinary device she co-invented and still uses today. In 1988, June moved into a new apartment com-plex geared to people with physical disabilities. A two-bedroom apartment made it possible to hire a live-in attendant as she now needed nighttime repo-sitioning. College students were a perfect fit for this position which offered housing, salary and days free for outside work or school. By 1995, home health aides were brought into the equation for mealtime and toileting assistance. Unlike the privately-hired overnight workers, the home health aides are agency-hired, and the case is managed by a nurse. Since 1991, June has used a BiPAP S/T ventilator with a nasal mask to help her breathe during the night. In 2000, she had a PLV-100 volume ventilator put on her wheelchair which she uses as needed with a mouthpiece attachment. As her care needs have increased, she reduces the potential of worker burnout by hiring three col-lege students to share the weekly, overnight sched-ule, each working 1-3 nights per week, in lieu of one live-in. (See Chapter 14 for "The 'Live-Out' Live-In." June's literary credits include articles for New Mobility and MDA's Quest. She founded and edited Living SMArt, an international newsletter for people with spinal muscular atrophy.

Product Details
ISBN: 9781888725605
ISBN-10: 1888725605
Publisher: Science & Humanities Press
Publication Date: January 1st, 2001
Pages: 170
Language: English