Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

NO CASES TO DATE

How one local retirement community prepared for a pandemic

- MediaNews Group

KENNETT SQUARE » In early March, Kendal-Crosslands Communitie­s began preparing for a pandemic, acquiring a supply of masks, gloves, and gowns and even had an Emergency Preparedne­ss Plan written. They then executed their plan and chartered their way to keep both residents and staff members safe.

“We were ahead of this pandemic from the beginning”, says Donna Taylor, Chief Health Services Officer.” “We assembled a team of staff members and quickly put in to place our protocols for effective infectious disease control.”

To mitigate spread of COVID-19, the community closed their campus to visitors, suspended all in-person resident group activities and communal dining, and along with the rest of the region asked residents to social distance and self-isolate on the campus.

To eliminate the number of essential staff members who were committed to come to work, the community created teams that rotated and others were able to work from home.

Recognizin­g the residents needed meals, mail, and medication­s, the community put into place creative solutions to deliver culinary dishes and groceries to over 800 residents daily, they obtained hard to acquire supplies such as the coveted toilet paper and hand sanitizer, and quickly created COVID-19 designated areas in

their nursing residency so that if any resident became infected with the virus, there was an area for them to recover while mitigating the spread throughout the home.

Testing strategies were performed well before mandates from regulatory agencies and that enabled the community to swiftly identify a few asymptomat­ic staff members who selfisolat­ed and recovered at home.

“We are a financiall­y healthy organizati­on and that has supported our highly executed pandemic response” says Lisa M. Marsilio, Chief Executive Officer. “We are so proud of our staff members who created complex systems and our residents continue to be responsibl­e realizing we are all in this together as one family”, says Marsilio.

Residents have discovered unimaginab­le good can come from a worldwide tragedy.

“I am happy with social distancing rules … I’ve learned a lot not only from different Zoom classes but other online lessons, books, readings, exercises, and meditation,” says one resident. Another resident said, “I can’t tell you how impressed we are with Kendal’s tremendous undertakin­g to keep us safe … what they are doing is beyond imaginatio­n.”

To date, Kendal-Crosslands Communitie­s has no known COVID-19 positive cases among residents.

Realizing the virus is still present in our region, Kendal-Crosslands Communitie­s remains vigilant with their infectious disease control measures and a ‘new normal’ is emerging.

Slowly, the community can open their outdoor pool, provide outdoor exercise classes on their 500-acre campus, and some services can resume but with proper mask wearing, social distancing, and contact tracing measures.

“Our community continues to work (tirelessly and selflessly) together to execute our plans in order to prevent the spread in our community and to keep everyone safe,” said Marsilio.

Realizing the virus is still present in our region, Kendal-Crosslands Communitie­s remains vigilant with their infectious disease control measures and a ‘new normal’ is emerging.

 ?? SUBMITTED PHOTO ?? Staff members at Kendal-Crosslands retirement complex display hand sanitizers that have been in use since the pandemic began in early March.
SUBMITTED PHOTO Staff members at Kendal-Crosslands retirement complex display hand sanitizers that have been in use since the pandemic began in early March.
 ?? SUBMITTED PHOTO ?? Kendal Crosslands residents enjoy the outdoor pool during new guidelines issued recently due to the coronaviru­s crisis.
SUBMITTED PHOTO Kendal Crosslands residents enjoy the outdoor pool during new guidelines issued recently due to the coronaviru­s crisis.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States