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About Comfort Keepers

Comfort Keepers provides award-winning in-home care for seniors and other adults in need of assistance with daily activities. Our highly trained and dedicated caregivers can help your loved one stay in their home for as long as safely possible—a dream come true for many elders.

Areas Served

Uplifting In-Home Care Services for Seniors & Other Adults Right Where You Need It. Comfort Keepers Toronto, ON provides in home care services and senior care in the following cities in Ontario: Toronto, North York, East York, York, Scarborough, Etobicoke, Leaside, and Agincourt

Hospital Bag Check List For Toronto Seniors: What To Pack

Toronto Senior Health  |  March 1, 2017

Sometimes hospital visits are planned. Other times they aren’t. While you or your loved one have time to pack all the necessary items for a planned stay, unplanned visits often leave your or your loved ones scrambling at the last minute. This is why it is important to have a list of items put together so when a unplanned visit pops up, packing will be quick and painless.

Well-planned packing helps make vacations more enjoyable. Likewise, what you pack for your own or a loved one’s admission to the hospital can make for a smoother, less stressful experience.

Seniors: What To Take To The Hospital

The following is a review of necessities for a hospital packing list, as well as items that can make a hospital stay more comfortable—plus those things that are best left at home.

Important medical documents and health care information serve as your or your loved one’s passport to the hospital.

Senior hospital visits – be sure to bring:

  • Photo ID
  • Your government health insurance card
  • A list of all the medications—prescription and over-the-counter—you or your loved is currently taking, along with dosage. (However, in most cases, hospitals ask that you bring only those medications that the physician requests.)
  • A copy of advance health care directives, such as durable power of attorney for health care and living will
  • A personal health record that includes information such as allergies, health conditions, immunization record and reports of recent tests or physical exams
  • Reports your physician gave you to bring to the hospital
  • A list of telephone numbers of family and friends to be contacted as needed

To avoid misplacing any of this important paperwork and information—which is critical for facilitating a patient’s treatment—keep it all together in one folder.

Seniors: What To Pack For The Hospital With Comfort In Mind

Hospitals often encourage patients and their families to bring other items to help make a hospital stay more pleasant or comfortable. Hospitals provide gowns and toiletries, but they generally invite patients to bring their own pajamas, bathrobe, cardigan sweater, non-slip socks or slippers, comb, brush, lotions, toothbrush and toothpaste, and lip balm. However, avoid perfumes and any highly-scented products. Keep in mind that short sleeves are best to accommodate intravenous lines.

Check ahead of time to find out what the hospital will allow. This information often can be found on the hospital’s Web site.

Other things for seniors to bring include:

  • Protective containers for holding eyeglasses or dentures when not in use
  • Books, magazines, crossword puzzles to help pass the time
  • Paper and pen for jotting down notes and questions—to help you remember to ask doctors or nurses when they are in the room
  • A small amount of money for newspapers and magazines and other items from the gift shop or vending machines.
  • Photos or small personal items. However, keep in mind that space is limited.
  • Clothing to wear home at discharge

Senior Hospitalization: What Items Not To Pack

Hospitals cannot be responsible for patients’ personal belongings. Generally they recommend against bringing valuables. Specific things to leave off the packing list:

  • Cell phones. In most cases, these are not permitted in patient care areas as they can interfere with heart monitors and other patient monitoring equipment
  • Tobacco products, because smoking is prohibited in health care facilities
  • Credit cards, checkbooks, large amounts of cash, jewelry, high-end portable music players and other valuables, as they  can easily be stolen amidst the activity of a hospital patient care unit

Before bringing any type of electronic items, check the hospital’s policy. Items that need to be plugged in generally are forbidden as their wiring does not meet hospital-grade standards. If you or a loved one does bring a portable electronic device, make sure it is in the care of a friend or loved one while the patient is sleeping or out of the room.

Comfort Keepers®’ trained caregivers help provide senior clients with the highest quality of life possible to keep them happy and healthy at home. Our Interactive Caregiving™ provides a system of care that addresses safety, nutrition, mind, body, and activities of daily living (ADLs).

For additional information on Comfort Keepers of Canada® at Toronto or any other Comfort Keepers of Canada® location please visit our home page or call us at 416-663-2930.

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