What you don’t know About Michigan Auto-Insurance can cost you, Millions!

Who We Are
At N-Home Touch Home Care,
We specialize in Michigan Auto Accident Personal Injury Protection in-home service provider. We act as a advocate/defender for the injured party and their families.
We Provide Attendant, and Replacement Care Services. We Support Activities of daily living providing Safety supervision and personal care at home. We offer support and certified training for family members to help care for injured victims in their homes. We Close the gap between Medical Doctors, Auto Insurance Companies and Attorneys.
We will work with you and your doctor to develop and manage a personalized home care plan that’s most convenient for you.
Auto Accident Personal Injury Protection (PIP)
Attendant Care Home Benefits Services.
N-home touch home care has been providing high quality home care services to clients in the Great state of Michigan area since 2015

24-Hour Care
With our 24-Hour Care services, patients can feel confident that their health matters will be addressed in a timely manner — without sacrificing their normal daily routines. At N-home touch home care, we care for our patients’ health and wellbeing and provide personalized medical home care attention that will get them feeling better again.

Attendant care
Attendant care is a No-Fault PIP benefit that ensures that car accident victims have the nursing assistance they need to recover from their injuries and begin rebuilding their lives What is attendant care?
When an auto accident victim is injured so badly that he or she cannot take care of her most basic needs (or “activities of daily living”), such as eating, using the bathroom, bathing and getting dressed, the victim’s Michigan No-Fault insurance company will pay a nurse or someone in the family to help. That service is called attendant care. People sometimes also refer to it as nursing services.
What are examples of attendant care services?
Examples of attendant care services come in many forms, including but not limited to the following:
Assistance with eating.
Assisting with activities of daily living
Safety supervision
Home safety check
Fetching, caring, lifting, closing opening, pushing, and pulling things for patient
Fall prevention monitoring
Standby safety monitoring
Balance and standing monitoring
Pain monitoring
Medication reminders and keeping on track reminders
Assistance with using the toilet.
Assistance with bathing and grooming.
Assistance with dressing and undressing.
Assistance with moving from bed to chair or repositioning in bed.
Assistance with walking or using a wheelchair.
Assistance with meal preparation.
Assistance with transportation.
Assistance with administering medication.
Assistance with changing bandages and dressing wounds.
Assistance with use of medical equipment.
Assistance with supervision and monitoring of a seriously injured accident victim.
Assistance with supervision and management of care providers.
Being “on-call” or “on stand-by” to help a seriously injured accident victim.
Contact us today and learn how you can benefit from our Attentive care services

Replacement care
At N-home touch home care, we setup replacement Services – PIP benefits during the first years after your car accident to reimburse people who help you by performing “ordinary and necessary services” that you can no longer do because of your accident-related injuries and limitations. Replacement services benefits typically cover every day, household tasks such as housekeeping, laundry, cleaning, lawn and garden maintenance, car maintenance, shoveling snow, meal preparation, baby-sitting/child care, driving family members to school and appointments and taking out

training
Michigan Caregiver Training 1 Caregiver Job Descriptions, Responsibilities and Protocol
Caregiver Job Descriptions, Responsibilities, Protocols
Professional caregivers must follow policies and procedures such as arriving on-time to their caregiving work assignment, taking care plan notes, and following all necessary care duties and safety protocol. Home Caregivers, also called Home Care Aides or Home Health Aides, are expected to follow a basic job description of duties, just as with all professional jobs.
CARE Plan Notes for Documenting Client Activities
CARE Plan Notes
Learn proper caregiver skills for observing, reporting, and documenting daily activities, along with legal requirements and guidelines for subjective and objective notes regarding changes in the functional ability and mental status of the client.
Communication Skills
Communication
Learn how to effectively communicate with seniors from different generations, individuals with Alzheimer's disease and other types of dementia, and those with hearing difficulties and special needs.
Personal Care, Bathing, and Toileting
Personal Care
Learn personal care tasks skills for senior clients, including bathing, skin care, hair care, mouth care, dressing, feeding, assistance with ambulation, exercise and transfers, positioning, toileting, and medication reminders.
Assistance with Ambulation, Exercise, Transfers (Adaptive Equipment), Positioning, Fall Prevention
Assistance with Ambulation
Safe adaptive equipment use for assisting clients with transfers from bed to chair to toilet to showers and in and out of wheelchairs. Learn types of transfers and devices used along with requirements for each device.
Basic Hygiene and Basic Infection Control
Hygiene and Infection Control
Learn how to maintain good hygiene for both the senior client and caregiver and safety to protect yourself and control infections. How to wash hands, use gloves properly, protect your face and body, and assist seniors with good daily hygiene.
Maintaining a Clean, Safe and Healthy Environment
Cleanliness
Learn standards for maintaining a clean and healthy environment for your senior client and for everyone visiting and caring for them by using the proper products and following a scheduled cleaning routine based on care needs.
Basic Personal and Environmental Safety Precautions
Safety
Learn basic precautions for personal and environmental safety, including procedures to follow to protect both yourself and your senior client.
Emergency Procedures, Including Basic First Aid and Client’s Emergency Preparedness Plan
Emergency Preparedness and First Aid
Learn what emergencies require basic first aid, such as cuts and burns, and what do when they happen. Learn what events are considered natural disasters and how to create and follow an emergency preparedness plan to protect yourself and your client. Understand environmental safety precautions for homes and when working at senior care facilities.
HIPAA PART 1: Confidentiality of Client Info and HiTECH Act
HIPAA Part 1
Understand confidentiality requirements for personal, financial and health information and the specifics of HIPAA, the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act and Who and What it is for as a caregiver. Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) of 1996 defines Covered Entities (CEs) and Business Associates (BAs). Find out more in this section. HiTech Act was an effort to speed up the transfer to electronic health records and put in place rules on how to safeguard the information.
HIPAA Part 2: Scenarios
HIPAA Part 2
HIPAA law and what it covers can be confusing. In this section we will give specific scenarios to help you understand what is a violation and what isn't. If you are ever in doubt about sharing information, it is always best to be more cautious.
How to Detect, Report, and Prevent Abuse and Neglect
Elder Abuse and Neglect
Learn the types of abuse and neglect, legal requirements for reporting (and legal punishments for not reporting,) and how to protect your senior client and yourself from physical, emotional, sexual, and financial abuse.
Bonus Section: Stroke Care and What Is Alzheimer's Disease?
Stroke, Alzheimer's
Seniors experiencing a stroke often require caregiving assistance as they rehabilitate. The first 6 months following the stroke incident are the most important for performing rehabilitation activities in order to rebuild the vascular communication pathways. Alzheimer's disease progresses over time, meaning there will be days where the person has a good memory and then days when they do not at the beginning of the disease.

First Aid and Emergency Certification
Safety Training 1 Maintaining a Clean, Safe and Healthy Environment
Learn standards for maintaining a clean and healthy environment for your senior client and for everyone visiting and caring for them by using the proper products and following a scheduled cleaning routine based on care needs.
Safety Training 2 Basic Personal and Environmental Safety Precautions
Learn basic precautions for personal and environmental safety, including procedures to follow to protect both yourself and your client.
Safety Training 3 Procedures for Natural Disasters and Emergencies
Learn what emergencies require basic first aid, such as cuts and burns, and what do when they happen. Learn what events are considered natural disasters and how to create and follow an emergency preparedness plan to protect yourself and your client. Understand environmental safety precautions for homes and when working at senior care facilities.
Blood Borne Pathogens for OSHA Requirements
Bloodborne pathogens are infectious micro-organisms found in the human blood that can cause disease in humans. Because of this, caregivers must be aware of risks for exposure and maintain safe practices to protect themselves and others.
Chemical Hazards OSHA
Any chemicals used in the workplace should always be reviewed and you should follow the safety precautions as outlined by something OSHA calls the "SDS", meaning: Safety Data Sheet.
Basic Infection Control Procedures
Learn how to maintain good hygiene for both the senior client and caregiver and safety to protect yourself and control infections.
Learn the factors that promote micro-organisms.
Learn signs and symptoms of infection.
Learn how to wash hands, use gloves properly, protect your face and body and assist seniors with good daily hygiene.
Recognizing Emergencies and Knowledge of Emergency Procedures
Learn what emergencies require basic first aid, such as cuts and burns, and what do when they happen. Learn what events are considered natural disasters and how to create and follow an emergency preparedness plan to protect yourself and your client. Understand environmental safety precautions for homes and when working at senior care facilities.

Welcome to N-Home Touch
There comes a time in each of our lives when we or our loved ones need homecare assistance. Support and assist with daily activities of daily living. If you or your loved ones are facing health problems, be they temporary or chronic, it may be time to reach out for help. N-Home Touch Home Care is your number one source for in home care solution and training service’s. Contact us today and see how we can be of assistance.
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