Houston Chronicle

Family caregivers routinely left off vaccine lists

Many worry what would happen ‘if I get sick’

- By Judith Graham

Robin Davidson entered the lobby of Houston Methodist Hospital, where her 89-year-old father, Joe, was being treated for a flare-up of congestive heart failure.

Before her stretched a line of people waiting to get COVID-19 vaccines. “It was agonizing to know that I couldn’t get in that line,” said Davidson, 50, who is devoted to her father and usually cares for him full time. “If I get sick, what would happen to him?”

Tens of thousands of middle-aged sons and daughters caring for older relatives with serious ailments but too young to qualify for a vaccine themselves are similarly terrified of becoming ill and wondering when they can get protected against the coronaviru­s.

Like aides and other workers in nursing homes, these family caregivers routinely administer medication­s, monitor blood pressure, cook, clean and help relatives wash, get dressed and use the toilet, among many other responsibi­lities. But they do so in apartments and houses, not in long-term care institutio­ns — and they’re not paid.

“In all but name, they’re essential health care workers, taking care of patients who are very sick, many of whom are completely reliant upon them, some of whom are dying,” said Katherine Ornstein, a caregiving expert and associate professor of geriatrics and palliative medicine at Mount Sinai’s medical school in New York City. “Yet, we don’t recognize or support them as such, and that’s a tragedy.”

The distinctio­n is critically important because health care workers have been prioritize­d for COVID vaccines, along with vulnerable older adults in nursing homes and assisted living facilities. But family members caring for equally vulnerable seniors living in the community are grouped with the general population in most states and may not get vaccines for months.

The exception: Older caregivers can qualify for vaccines by virtue of their age as states approve vaccines for adults ages 65, 70 or 75 and above. A few states have moved family caregivers into phase 1a of their vaccine rollouts, the top priority tier. Notably, South Carolina has done so for families caring for medically fragile children, and Illinois has given that designatio­n to families caring for relatives of all ages with significan­t disabiliti­es.

Arizona is also trying to accommodat­e caregivers who accompany older residents to vaccinatio­n sites, Dr. Cara Christ, director of the state’s Department of Health Services, said Monday during a Zoom briefing for President Joe Biden. Comprehens­ive data about which states are granting priority status to family caregivers is not available.

Meanwhile, the Department of Veterans Affairs recently announced plans to offer vaccines to people participat­ing in its Program of Comprehens­ive Assistance for Family Caregivers. That initiative gives financial stipends to family members caring for veterans with serious injuries; 21,612 veterans are enrolled, including 2,310 age 65 or older, according to the VA. Family members can be vaccinated when the veterans they look after become eligible, a spokespers­on said.

“The current pandemic has amplified the importance of our caregivers whom we recognize as valuable members of Veterans’ health care teams,” Dr. Richard Stone, VA acting undersecre­tary for health, said in the announceme­nt.

An estimated 53 million Americans are caregivers, according to a 2020 report. Nearly one-third spend 21 hours or more each week helping older adults and people with disabiliti­es with personal care, household tasks and nursing-style care (giving injections, tending wounds, administer­ing oxygen and more). An estimated 40 percent are providing high-intensity care, a measure of complicate­d, time-consuming caregiving demands.

This is the group that should be getting vaccines, not caregivers who live at a distance or who don’t provide direct, hands-on care, said Carol Levine, a senior fellow and former director of the Families and Health Care Project at the United Hospital Fund in New York City.

Rosanne Corcoran, 53, is among them. Her 92year-old mother, Rose, who has advanced dementia, lives with Corcoran and her family in Collegevil­le, Pa., on the second floor of their house. She hasn’t come down the stairs in three years.

“I wouldn’t be able to take her somewhere to get the vaccine. She doesn’t have any stamina,” said Corcoran, who arranges for doctors to make house calls when her mother needs attention. When she called their medical practice recently, an administra­tor said they didn’t have access to the vaccines.

Corcoran said she “does everything for her mother,” including bathing her, dressing her, feeding her, giving her medication­s, monitoring her medical needs and responding to her emotional needs. Before the pandemic, a companion came for five hours a day, offering some relief. But last March, Corcoran let the companion go and took on all her mother’s care herself.

Corcoran wishes she could get a vaccinatio­n sooner, rather than later. “If I got sick, God forbid, my mother would wind up in a nursing home,” she said. “The thought of my mother having to leave here, where she knows she’s safe and loved, and go to a place like that makes me sick to my stomach.”

Although COVID cases are dropping in nursing homes and assisted living facilities as residents and staff members receive vaccines, 36 percent of deaths during the pandemic have occurred in these settings.

In Tomball, Robin Davidson’s father was independen­t before the pandemic, but he began declining as he stopped going out and became more sedentary. For almost a year, Davidson has driven every day to his 11-acre ranch, 5 miles from where she lives, and spent hours tending to him and the property’s upkeep.

“Every day, when I would come in, I would wonder, was I careful enough to avoid the virus? Could I have picked something up at the store or getting gas? Am I going to be the reason that he dies? My constant proximity to him and my care for him is terrifying,” she said.

Since her father’s hospitaliz­ation, Davidson’s goal is to stabilize him so he can enroll in a clinical trial for congestive heart failure. Medication­s for that condition no longer work for him, and fluid retention has become a major issue. He’s now home on the ranch after spending more than a week in the hospital and he’s gotten two doses of vaccine — “an indescriba­ble relief,” Davidson said.

Out of the blue, she received a text from the Harris County health department earlier this month, after putting herself on a vaccine wait-list. Vaccines were available, it read, and she quickly signed up and got a shot. Davidson ended up being eligible because she has two chronic medical conditions that raise her risk of COVID; Harris County doesn’t officially recognize family caregivers in its vaccine allocation plan, a spokespers­on said.

 ?? Daniel Francis / TNS ?? Rosanne Corcoran, right, cares for her mother, Rose, but has been unable to get the COVID-19 vaccine.
Daniel Francis / TNS Rosanne Corcoran, right, cares for her mother, Rose, but has been unable to get the COVID-19 vaccine.
 ?? Kevin Parker / TNS ?? Robin Davidson is a full-time caregiver for her father, Joe, who has congestive heart failure.
Kevin Parker / TNS Robin Davidson is a full-time caregiver for her father, Joe, who has congestive heart failure.

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