Posts Tagged ‘storage solutions’

Tips on organizing your child’s home medical supplies; advice from PHS

Friday, October 8th, 2010

In our last post, two PHS moms shared stories about how they organize and manage homecare medications and medical supplies for their medically-fragile children. Why is it important to organize?

  • It helps you manage your inventory. You know what supplies you have on hand and when you are running low and need to reorder.
  • It’s cost effective. You save insurance dollars by not over ordering supplies and by being efficient with those you have.
  • It makes your home safer for your child. You can save precious time and even a life by finding supplies quickly in emergency situations.

Watch Becki Nielsen, a respiratory therapist and Director of PHS Ancillary Services, demonstrate how to successfully organize and manage medical supplies and special needs equipment.


Get involved with ordering medical supplies

  • Know exactly which medical supplies you are using in the home. Become familiar with each item.
  • Keep track of your inventory. The PHS supply sheet itemizes each item your child uses by type, description, code and the minimum amount you should have on hand at all times for safety—allowing you to quickly see what you have, what you need, and when and how much to order. If you don’t have a supply sheet, contact a PHS customer service representative at 651-642-1825 to have one sent to your home specific to your child.

Utilize a three-tiered system, adapting it to fit your child’s needs

  • Keep most supplies in a central supply area, categorized, stored, and organized according to need.
  • Keep supplies used by your child daily by the bed.
  • Have an emergency set of supplies available as back up and another set for use when you leave home in a convenient travel bag.

Can you add to the conversation about organizing homecare medical supplies? Do you have any organization questions or tips you’d like to share with other families? We’d love to hear from you.

How to organize your child’s medical supplies; advice from parents

Monday, October 4th, 2010

“Things are chaotic when you’ve got a special needs child and you’re trying to balance all the things in your life that are changing,” says Diana Johnson.

One thing you can control, though—all the special needs equipment and medical supplies required to provide home care for your technology-dependent child.

Diana’s daughter, Sarah, has Dravet syndrome, a severe form of epilepsy, and has been a PHS patient since June 2006. “We started out with a small amount of supplies,” Diana recalled, “but as Sarah became more medically complex, we found there were more and more things we needed to find a place for. I knew I needed to be more organized but didn’t know how to make that happen.”

Help in creating supply storage solutions

Diana worked with a personal care assistant and PHS to create an organized and efficient storage system, utilizing one large, central closet as the main storage space for most of Sarah’s supplies. Diana knows where to find everything, and can easily access what she needs from neatly labeled, plastic, pull-out bins, drawers and shelves—especially important in an emergency situation. Plus, she always knows what she has on hand and when she needs to reorder an item.

Watch how Diana has Sarah’s medical supplies organized:


More medical supplies, more closets for storage

Tana Wall, a PHS patient with spina bifida and other illness, requires more supplies than Sarah so mom Jill Wall uses multiple closets for storage. The closet in Tana’s room holds the most often-needed supplies. “We try to hide most of the medical supplies in her room,” says Jill, “so it looks more like a kid’s room than a hospital room, but it’s still very efficient.” Another closet is organized with supplies not routinely used every day, while yet another, located next to the bathroom, holds medical supplies that require water.

A PHS respiratory therapist helped Jill set up a bedside stand for items needed for daily care, such as suction equipment, hand sanitizer, trach supplies, dressing supplies, topical meds, blood pressure machine and nebulizer machine.

“You don’t have to spend a lot of money to organize,” she adds. “For example, I use a lot of wipes so I clean the containers and use them to store other smaller supplies.”

See Jill’s organization system:

Can you add to the conversation about organizing homecare medical supplies? Share your best medical supply organization tip or ask your most burning organization question. We’d love to hear from you.