
Karen Zimmerman has been a nurse for 32 years. Twenty-nine of those were spent inside hospital walls. She thought she understood nursing.
“I didn’t know what I was missing as a nurse, until I cared for residents in their homes,” she said.
That realization didn’t come in a single dramatic moment. It unfolded quietly — in living rooms, at kitchen tables, and beside recliners, as she leaned down to offer a gentle side hug to a resident after a long night.
In a hospital, you see a diagnosis.
In a home, you notice:
- The photo albums on the shelf
- The chair they’ve sat in for 20 years
- The pet who never leaves their side
- The stack of unopened mail growing a little too high
Relationship Comes First
In a hospital: speed matters, protocols matter, efficiency matters.
In home health, all those things come into play, but relationships matter first.
“People say they love their patients, but you truly don’t learn what loving someone means until you get to know them on a personal level and care for them in their home,” Karen said.
She didn’t realize what was missing until she had the time to build trust.
When trust is built, everything else works better:
- Education sticks
- Concerns surface earlier
- Small changes get noticed
- Families feel supported
“To me, it truly started with the relationship, and no other place allowed me to do that,” she said.
What Charts Don’t Show
At home, real life is happening.
You see:
- The throw rug that could cause a fall
- The kitchen routine that affects medication timing
- The loneliness that impacts appetite
- The pride that makes someone hesitant to ask for help
You’re standing in the middle of someone’s actual life and suddenly you see what doesn’t get written in a chart. Recognizing those patterns is something that no hospital shift can ever fully teach you.
The Privilege of Being Invited In
Home health is never a solo act.
- Physical therapists rebuild strength
- Occupational therapists restore independence
- Providers are ready to listen.
- Nurses become the connecting thread.
Home health is different because it’s personal.
You aren’t assigned a room number. You are invited into someone’s space.
That invitation is a privilege. At All Care, Karen says this is the beautiful advantage nurses quickly discover.
You are not just performing tasks.
You are:
- Educating
- Encouraging
- Coordinating care
- Supporting families
- Preserving dignity
You have the time to notice the little things. And the little things are often the big things.