『Unfilter Caregiver』のカバーアート

Unfilter Caregiver

Unfilter Caregiver

著者: Lindsay Polis
無料で聴く

今ならプレミアムプランが3カ月 月額99円

2026年5月12日まで。4か月目以降は月額1,500円で自動更新します。

概要

Unfilter Caregiver is a candid podcast hosted by Lindsay and Caro of FindingHomeCare.net, exploring the real stories, challenges, and wins inside the caregiver industry. From common pitfalls families face when searching for care to the lessons learned by caregivers and care providers, each episode offers honest conversations, practical insight, and a grounded look at what it takes to navigate home care with confidence.Lindsay Polis 衛生・健康的な生活 身体的病い・疾患
エピソード
  • What Families Need to Know Before a Loved One Leaves the Hospital
    2026/05/05

    When a loved one is discharged from a hospital, families are often forced to make major care decisions fast. In this episode of Unfiltered Caregiver, Lindsay and Caro break down what really happens when someone is sent to a skilled nursing facility, why a “five-star” rating does not always mean one-on-one attention, and what families should understand before choosing the next step.

    Using the story of a client named “Nancy,” Lindsay shares the gap between expectations and reality inside a senior nursing facility. The conversation also covers overworked CNAs, caregiver pay, the value of private care, and why getting a loved one back home safely should often be the ultimate goal.

    • 00:00 Introduction to Unfiltered Caregiver
    • 00:29 What Happens After Hospital Discharge
    • 00:52 Choosing a Skilled Nursing Facility
    • 01:38 Why Five-Star Care May Still Feel Understaffed
    • 03:47 Caro on Providing One-on-One Care in Facilities
    • 05:12 Why Families Should Value and Support Caregivers
    • 07:57 The Goal of Getting Loved Ones Back Home
    • 09:00 Closing Thoughts from Lindsay
    • Families usually face a quick choice after hospital discharge: a skilled nursing facility, assisted living, or going home with family or caregiver support.
    • A highly rated facility can still feel overwhelming if CNAs are responsible for too many patients at once.
    • Lindsay and Caro emphasize that CNAs are often doing intense hands-on work while being underpaid and stretched thin.
    • Private one-on-one caregiving can help families fill the gap when a loved one needs companionship, safety monitoring, updates, and personal attention.
    • Caregiver retention is tied directly to pay, respect, and how agencies treat their workers.
    • The episode’s central message is that many seniors recover and live better when they can return to a familiar home environment with the right care plan.

    “Even if you want a five-star skilled nursing facility, you need to understand what that really means.”

    “They’re not just employees. They are people keeping your loved one alive, happy, and healthy.”

    “Sometimes that’s all they need, just somebody to keep them company.”

    “The goal is to get them out and go home.”

    “When they’re paid well and treated well, your loved ones are going to be taken care of.”

    Subscribe to the podcast, leave a review, and share this episode with someone who is trying to understand care options after a hospital discharge.

    Visit FindingHomecare.net to learn more about Lindsay’s home care work.


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    10 分
  • Why Caregivers Quit: Pay, Burnout, and the Problem With “Warm Body” Care
    2026/05/05

    Caregiver turnover is one of the biggest problems families face when trying to keep a loved one safe at home. In this episode of Unfiltered Caregivers, Lindsay and Caro talk honestly about why caregivers leave, what families should watch for, and why consistency matters so much in home care.

    They discuss low pay, poor agency staffing, lack of training, weak communication, and the emotional toll that comes when caregivers are not properly supported. Lindsay also shares how she vets caregivers for specific needs like Parkinson’s, dementia, Alzheimer’s, transfers, medication awareness, and family expectations, while Caro explains how better pay and stronger teamwork helped her value her role even more.

    Timestamps and Topics

    • 00:00 Why Caregivers Quit and Caro’s Experience With Agencies
    • 01:58 Lindsay on Agency Problems and “Warm Body” Staffing
    • 03:43 Pay, Retention, and Why Good Caregivers Stay
    • 05:20 What Families Should Ask Before Hiring a Caregiver
    • 06:04 Dementia, Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, and the Need for Consistency
    • 06:45 Caro on Feeling Undervalued and Finding a Better Team
    • 08:38 Lindsay’s Perspective as a Caregiver and Business Owner
    • 09:33 Final Advice for Families Looking for Care

    Key Takeaways

    • Many caregivers leave because low pay makes it hard to stay committed, especially in high-cost areas like San Diego.
    • Families should not assume every caregiver has the right experience for complex needs like dementia, Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, mobility issues, or transfers.
    • Constant caregiver turnover can be especially difficult for clients with memory-related conditions who need routine and familiar faces.
    • Strong communication between caregivers, families, and the person coordinating care can make a major difference in quality.
    • Lindsay emphasizes careful vetting, including experience, references, background checks, and matching caregivers to the client’s specific needs.
    • Caro shares that being respected, paid fairly, and supported by a real team helped her feel more valued in her caregiving work.

    Quotes

    “Most of the caregivers just go. They sit on their phones.”

    “You definitely do not want just a warm body sent to your loved one.”

    “When they get a good wage, going back to our topic, they stay.”

    “They need consistency.”

    “I now value my job even more and my worth, because I feel like I was being cut short with agencies.”

    Call to ActionVisit FindingHomecare.net to learn more about Lindsay’s home care work.

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    10 分
  • Hospice, Dementia, and In-Home Care: A Caregiver Story About Dignity at End of Life
    2026/05/05

    In the first episode of Unfiltered Caregiver, hosts Lindsay and Caro introduce the mission of the podcast through a real caregiving story about hospice, dementia, trust, and dignity. The episode follows a late-90s client, referred to as Bob, who had dementia and called hospice on himself, raising major concerns for the people around him.

    Lindsay and Caro discuss how the right caregiver can change the entire experience for a family. They talk about what hospice does and does not provide, why families need to do their homework when hiring care, and how a caregiver can become part of the family during one of the most vulnerable stages of life.

    Timestamps and Topics

    • 00:00 Welcome to Unfiltered Caregiver
    • 00:51 A Dementia Patient Calls Hospice on Himself
    • 01:33 Meeting Bob and Building Trust
    • 02:27 The Reality of His Living Conditions
    • 03:39 Concerns About Hospice and Gaps in Care
    • 04:25 What Hospice Does and Does Not Provide
    • 05:50 Turning a Difficult Situation Into Dignified Care
    • 07:21 How Families Should Choose a Caregiver

    Key Takeaways

    • Hospice care is important, but it does not replace daily one-on-one support like meal prep, grocery shopping, housekeeping, medication reminders, companionship, and hygiene care.
    • A person with dementia making major care decisions alone can be a red flag, especially if the proper point of contact or power of attorney is not included.
    • The right caregiver can build trust with a client who may have rejected help from others.
    • Families should look carefully at reviews, referrals, and real family experiences before choosing a home care company.
    • Caregiving is not just a task-based job. At its best, it gives people dignity, comfort, and connection near the end of life.

    “Caregivers can become like a part of somebody’s family.”

    “She gave this guy dignity while he was dying.”

    “When you’re taking care of somebody, you’re not just going to a 9 to 5 job.”

    “Hospice does not provide that extra one-on-one care.”

    “I’m a huge advocate for caregivers. I’m a huge advocate for families.”


    Subscribe to Unfiltered Caregiver for honest conversations about home care, hospice, family support, and the caregiver industry.


    Visit FindingHomecare.net to learn more about Lindsay’s home care work.

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    9 分
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