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Carol
Bess
That said, you do typically have the right to request discharge and insist on it as long as basic health care and specific care needs your son may have are covered. For example, if he has a trach or feeding tube family may be required to show that they can take care of them. You should not need an attorney and you should be participating in planning conferences with the rehab team. You should be able to negotiate a mutuallly agreeable discharge date and make plans around that. UNLESS the rehab facility is unethical and just determined to milk every dollar out of his insurers and then dump him wherever when the money runs out - I hope you are not dealing with that kind of facility. I once helped put a company like that out of business and would like to think there are not that many genuinely bad places left out there. If your some is making good progress and you have good access to the staff and speak regularly with the social worker and/or d/c planner and physician, it is most likely not a bad facility. Let us know what you reallly suspect after thinking about it some more - maybe we can help either way.