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Topic

About Caregiver Work

Free talk
#1
  • Nina
  • mail
  • 2022/07/27 20:00

Let's exchange information and talk about your problems.
Basically, you can talk about anything, but be careful not to give out personal information.

This text has been translated by auto-translation. There may be a slight difference between the original text and the translation. (Original Language: 日本語)

#43
  • 2022/08/04 (Thu) 19:53
  • Report

It would be nice if the caregiver has a full time job or some other benet, but it's tough if you're not compensated on an hourly basis. It's all physical labor, like changing diapers. The company will screen clients because qualified people are favored by the company, the long-timers are bossy, and the rest get little or no raises, so you have to favor yourself in that way. In the end, people who are not capable of doing anything else rather than wanting to serve others end up staying long enough to find new recruits and get rid of their exasperation. In fact, I don't think qualified people who want to serve others would work for a Japanese agent.

This text has been translated by auto-translation. There may be a slight difference between the original text and the translation. (Original Language: 日本語)

#44
  • にちか
  • 2022/08/04 (Thu) 22:31
  • Report

Surprisingly, it wasn't physical labor.
As someone wrote earlier, I sat down when there was nothing I could do to help. Changing diapers doesn't take much strength. I liked taking care of them too, but I still didn't like the other messes.

This text has been translated by auto-translation. There may be a slight difference between the original text and the translation. (Original Language: 日本語)

#45
  • 2022/08/05 (Fri) 00:00
  • Report

I see ? there is a difference between those who do nothing and those who do a lot. I was doing laundry, vacuuming, cooking, polishing the microwave, etc. because no one else was doing it. We were a couple. But the person who came later who had a nursing license talked with the husband all the time and made the house dirty, but I think they relied on me because I had a nursing license. The client was the wife, though.
So I stopped working for the same client
.
On the other hand, there was a care giver who took care of a client with a bad leg by giving her exercises to prevent her leg from weakening. Since no one is watching, there is not a proper standard. The rest is whether the client likes it or not. But on the other hand, I refused to work with clients who needed diaper changes and men, but they still insisted, saying it was easy. But in the end, it was a lot of work.

This text has been translated by auto-translation. There may be a slight difference between the original text and the translation. (Original Language: 日本語)

#46
  • にちか
  • 2022/08/05 (Fri) 01:05
  • Report

I did laundry, cooking, cleaning, bathing, exercising, and other things as normal.
But I didn't do the family stuff, just the clients, so it wasn't a hard amount to do at all, and I had plenty of time to do it, and I felt like I had a lot of free time.
Changing diapers was easy, and we also accepted male clients. I liked taking care of people who used wheelchairs, etc. more than those who had no physical disabilities, and I was happy to be helpful. I am sure it was a good fit, and maybe it was a good fit for someone like me.

This text has been translated by auto-translation. There may be a slight difference between the original text and the translation. (Original Language: 日本語)

#47
  • 山の妖精
  • 2022/08/05 (Fri) 17:30
  • Report

No matter what profession you are in, even if you are doing the same job, there are those who can handle it well and those who can't, those who choose the job description and those who don't, and those who can move flexibly and those who can't. In the case of dispatched or home-visit caregivers, there is no supervisor, and the work is handled immediately on site, so it is likely that differences in individual abilities will emerge.

This text has been translated by auto-translation. There may be a slight difference between the original text and the translation. (Original Language: 日本語)

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