Daily Observer (Jamaica)

8 nuns die of COVID-19 at Wisconsin convent

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WISCONSIN, United States (AP) — Eight nuns living at a retirement home for sisters in suburban Milwaukee died of COVID-19 complicati­ons in the last week — including four who passed away on the same day — a grim reminder of how quickly the virus can spread in congregate living situations, even when precaution­s are taken.

Notre Dame of Elm Grove had been free of the virus for the last nine months, but the congregati­on that runs the home found out on Thanksgivi­ng Day that one of the roughly 100 sisters who live there had tested positive. Despite social distancing and other mitigation efforts that were already in place, several more positive tests followed, said Sister Debra Marie Sciano, the provincial leader for School Sisters of Notre Dame Central Pacific Province.

The first death happened last week, and the death announceme­nts kept coming. Four of the eight nuns died on Monday alone, a difficult situation for other sisters in the home and members of the broader congregati­on, who consider each other family.

“Even though they’re older and most of the sisters that did go to God are in their late 80s, 90s ... we didn’t expect them to go so, so quickly,” Sciano said. “So it was just very difficult for us.”

Sciano said the congregati­on isolated sisters who tested positive into the same area so they would have no contact with others. They are advised to stay in their rooms, where meals are brought to them. Funerals and memorial services are being broadcast on closed-circuit TV. Sciano declined to say how many other sisters have tested positive, citing the residents’ privacy.

The outbreak comes months after similar homes had reported multiple deaths from the coronaviru­s. In July, 13 nuns died at a convent near Detroit and seven died at a centre for Maryknoll sisters in New York. At least six nuns also died at Our Lady of the Angels convent in Greenfield, Wisconsin — a home that provides memory care for nuns of the School Sisters of St Francis and the School Sisters of Notre Dame.

Earlier this month, church authoritie­s said 76 Catholic nuns tested positive for COVID-19 after an outbreak at a Franciscan convent in north-western Germany, forcing health authoritie­s to put the entire monastery under quarantine.

Sciano said that Our Lady of the Angels in Greenfield has had no additional positive cases for many months, and the facility was still not allowing visitors.

Deena Swank, communicat­ions director for the Felecian Sisters of North America, which lost 13 sisters — about a fifth of the population at the Livonia, Michigan, convent — said they have not had additional deaths there and they are eager to get sisters vaccinated when possible.

Sciano said she’s not aware of anyone at the Notre Dame of Elm Grove home being on a priority list for vaccines, but administra­tors are contacting local pharmacies to try to get vaccines lined up for the future.

Convents share some of the same issues as nursing homes, which are the hardest-hit sector in the US in terms of COVID-19 deaths. In many cases, their population­s are elderly and live in close quarters with one another.

Linda Wickstrom, spokeswoma­n for the Waukesha County Department of Health & Human Services, said county disease investigat­ors have been working with the facility since School Sisters of Notre Dame contacted them in November.

“Given the extreme contagious­ness of this virus, it is exceedingl­y important for congregate settings to practise basic protocols to stop the spread of the disease,” Wickstrom said. She said the School Sisters of Notre Dame have been disinfecti­ng hightouch surfaces, washing hands frequently, social distancing and wearing appropriat­e face coverings. Sciano said all residents with the virus have been isolated, and visitors are not allowed.

The School Sisters of Notre Dame establishe­d the Notre Dame of Elm Grove home in 1859 to provide an orphanage for children in the area. It later became a home for elderly and ill sisters, according to its website.

The facility’s first COVID-19 death happened December 9, when Sisters Rose M Feess and Mary Elva Wiesner died. Sister Dorothy Macintyre died December 11 and Sister Mary Alexius Portz died Sunday, according to the congregati­on’s website. Sisters Cynthia Borman, Joan Emily Kaul, Lillia Langreck and Michael Marie Laux all died on Monday.

Sciano said all of the women worked as educators. Some were missionari­es. Some were musicians. Some worked on peace and justice issues. One was a published poet. According to the congregati­on’s website, one was a teacher and principal who loved working in the summers on an American Indian reservatio­n in South Dakota. Another taught in Catholic elementary schools for more than 40 years and worked part-time as a gift shop coordinato­r at the Elm Grove home.

“We believe that each of these sisters, and and all the sisters, really, they’ve made a difference in this world,” Sciano said, adding, “I just think it’s important that people know that, and that they were committed up until the end of their lives.”

She said she hopes others can learn from the sisters’ lives and continue their mission to “maybe make this world just a little bit better place because of them.”

 ?? (Photo: AP) ?? A ‘do not trespass sign’ is displayed outside the School Sisters of Notre Dame Central Pacific Province, Thursday, December 17, 2020, in Elm Grove, Wisconsin. Eight nuns living in the suburban Milwaukee covent have died in the last week from COVID-19, according to the congregati­on.
(Photo: AP) A ‘do not trespass sign’ is displayed outside the School Sisters of Notre Dame Central Pacific Province, Thursday, December 17, 2020, in Elm Grove, Wisconsin. Eight nuns living in the suburban Milwaukee covent have died in the last week from COVID-19, according to the congregati­on.

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