CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2020, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“MORE VISITORS NEEDED TO STEM COVID
IN NURSING HOMES”
More than six months into the COVID-19 pandemic, no one has
done much to stop the near-constant toll the coronavirus has taken among those
most vulnerable to it: people living in nursing homes.
It’s well known by now that almost three-fourths of all
fatalities from this virus come in the 65-and-up age group, and virtually
everyone involved in trying to bring the plague to heel calls continuously for
protecting those most prone to infection.
That includes California Gov. Gavin Newsom and the newest
addition to President Trump’s coronavirus task force, Scott Atlas – a scholar
at Stanford University’s conservative Hoover Institution think tank, a
physician not trained as an epidemics expert. But none of these folks faces up
to the obvious: To stem Covid-caused deaths, they will have to do something
about the toll in nursing homes.
For of the many fatalities among senior citizens, about
two-thirds – or almost half the total deaths – have been residents of the
nation’s almost 15,000 nursing homes, just under 2,000 of them in California.
That’s because this virus is particularly pernicious when attacking those who
are already compromised – and who lives in nursing homes if not previously
compromised in some way?
It’s been clear from the pandemic’s beginning last spring
that nursing homes – often not prepared for external disasters like wildfires
and earthquakes – also were not and still are not generally equipped to stem
the virus.
This is because of conditions inside the homes, like
frequently leaving disabled patients abed for days at a time, not testing
staffers very often for viral exposure and not always establishing social
distance within the homes. It’s also because both state and federal governments
have failed consistently in responding to appeals from nursing home groups for
more supplies of quality personal protection equipment for their workers.
But the most vital keys to stemming the viral tide among
those most vulnerable are two items, one very specific to nursing homes, one
very general.
First, nursing homes must be allowed, even compelled, to
allow more visitors. At the start of the pandemic, nursing homes nationwide
stopped allowing any visitors. Not even state inspectors could get in for fear
they might bring in contagion. But staff continued to come and go and still
does, often working at more than one job because wages in the homes can be very
low.
Without visitors, no one can know what really goes on in
the homes. Friends and relatives who make contact with residents through
ground-floor windows and Facetime or Zoom conversations can barely get an
inkling. Nursing home managements love complying with no-visitor rules, as that
means no one can monitor their practices.
This makes allowing visitors the most direct way to improve
things in the homes. There have been moves in that direction. In California, visitors
can enter now, to see one per resident at a time, if a home has had no COVID-19
cases for several weeks and if they dress up in mask, gown and gloves to make
sure of sanitation on all sides. But homes with no virus cases for weeks at a
time are scarce, so this rule still needs more easing. For visitors have long
been the prime control on nursing home practices. They see when patients are
dehydrated, not bathed regularly, suffer from bedsores or are not properly
distanced from each other.
The second need to cut the death toll in long-term care
homes is much more general: a great reduction in cases within the outside
community. For as isolated as the residents have become, often causing them
enormous mental and emotional distress, staffers in the homes are just the
opposite. Besides often working multiple jobs, they frequently live in crowded
quarters among people of all ages and health practices and they bring those
exposures into the homes daily. When community-wide caseloads rise, that means
viral incidence and deaths in nursing homes do, too.
Nursing homes must have three things if the pace of deaths
there is to subside: More equipment, better conditions outside the homes and,
most important, more visitors so that relatives and others can know what’s
going on inside and act on it where needed.
-30-
Email Thomas Elias at
tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough, The Most Promising
Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It" is now
available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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