Los Angeles Times

In a historic time, she’s joined a club for the ages

Marjorie Leach is a centenaria­n who’s survived COVID

- By Maria L. La Ganga and Francine Orr

They wrote their promises in big block letters on a portable chalkboard and held it up to the nursing home window:

WE WILL BE BACK TOMORROW.

WE ARE BUYING YOUR FAVORITE FOODS!

YOU ARE COMING HOME.

The tiny woman on the other side of the glass was busy eating pudding from the tray in front of her, but she nodded at the messages and the smiling women who held them up. She was dwarfed by the hospital bed, swimming in a pair of white pajamas printed with black, gray and red Scottish terriers.

You wouldn’t know it from looking at her, but Marjorie Leach belongs to one of the most exclusive clubs around, women and men whose mere existence warrants breathless headlines across the globe. Dues are high, membership requiremen­ts stiff: You must be at least 100 years old. And you must have survived COVID- 19.

Leach belongs, and she has definitely paid. Even though she was largely free of virus symptoms, the 101year- old retired bookkeeper bounced back and forth between hospitals and nursing

‘ I told the nurse before we left the nursing home, “Not everybody who comes here gets to go home.” We’re lucky kids. We get our mom.’ — KATHLEEN HILL, one of Marjorie Leach’s daughters

homes for three months.

But on this bright Thursday in mid- December, her daughters were preparing to bring her home.

In time for Christmas. And a new year with a new president — she voted by absentee ballot for Joe Biden. And yet another birthday. On Jan. 5, she will turn 102. To celebrate, she wants vanilla ice cream and sliced strawberri­es.

The frail centenaria­n’s experience underscore­s two brutal truths about COVID19, which has killed more people 85 and older than any other segment of the population and ravaged nursing homes throughout the country.

As the pandemic drags on, hospitals are seeing more patients like Leach, who were admitted for other ailments but ended up in COVID wards because they happened to be infected.

And even though the elderly woman did not test positive until Dec. 1 and has largely avoided COVID- 19’ s worst direct effects — the scarred lungs, the shortness of breath, the coughing, the blood clots, the loss of taste and smell — its indirect impacts have taken a terrible toll. Especially the isolation. COVID- 19 “displaced her from her loved ones,” said Dr. Marwa Kilani, medical director of palliative care at Providence Holy Cross Medical Center. Kilani cared for Leach during two stays at the Mission Hills hospital — one for a broken hip, the other for a kidney infection.

“It was a one- two punch for her,” Kilani said. If the pandemic had not happened, “she may have just broken her hip, bounced back, went to rehab for a bit and gone back to the time when she would wake up, go for the [ television] remote and start her day.”

Kilani thought about loneliness, a byproduct of COVID- 19. She wondered whether it might shorten Leach’s life. She struggled for words. Then her answer came quickly. “I’d put money on it.” Leach moved in with her daughter, Kathleen Hill, in 2004. They live with Hill’s daughter Marguerite in a cream- colored ranch house on a leafy street in Granada Hills.

Leach would get herself up in the morning, get dressed, brush her teeth, brush her hair. Then she’d grab her walker, head to the living room, f ind the remote control and switch on CNN. Until her eyesight worsened and she began to have mild dementia, she would knit and paint western scenes — cowboys and American Indians in oils.

Leach, her late husband and a couple of friends owned a “record, television and hi- f i store” in Indio, where she kept the books, Hill said. They also repaired electronic­s, because “back in the day, you didn’t throw things away.” She has three children and loves television and crossword puzzles.

“She’s had short- term memory issues for at least 10 years,” Hill said. “It’s like someone followed her with an eraser, and everything was gone. ... But you could talk to her, have an intelligen­t conversati­on. There was no loss to her intellect.

“If we watched ‘ Jeopardy!’ or ‘ Wheel of Fortune,’ ” Hill added, “she’d guess the answers to the puzzles often before anyone else did. She was in the moment.”

And then, in late August, she was using her walker and reaching for the remote when she fell on her left hip. Hill called 911. An ambulance took Leach to Holy Cross.

Surgery repaired the damage. Leach began to heal. She was transferre­d to a rehabilita­tion center. That’s where things began falling apart.

She contracted a kidney infection. Her roommate tested positive for the coronaviru­s. Leach tested negative and was moved to an isolation room. The infection worsened. She returned to Holy Cross.

On Dec. 1, she got the bad news: she, too, was positive for the coronaviru­s.

Three days later, she was well enough to be discharged

from the hospital. But because she had COVID- 19 and was under strict quarantine orders, her rehab facility would not take her back.

And she couldn’t quarantine at home, because Hill and her daughter are among those most at risk for the coronaviru­s. The 73- year- old has heart problems and diabetes. Marguerite, 42, has thyroid cancer and is immunocomp­romised.

Enter nursing home No. 2, Mountain View Convales

cent Hospital in Sylmar, where Leach stayed until she was out of quarantine.

Hospitals and nursing homes had strict no- visit rules to help stanch the spread of the disease. Leach was largely separated from her family for more than three months.

Her only familiar companion was a stuffed dog named Poofey Woo. From institutio­n to institutio­n, she held on to the scruffy creature for dear life.

Hill would sometimes intercept her mother when the nursing home took her to a doctor’s office for an appointmen­t. But she f igures she saw Leach in person only four brief times in three months.

“On one of those visits, I brought her ballot,” Hill recounted. “I said, ‘ Mom, do you want to vote?’ She said, ‘ No.’ I said, ‘ Mom, do you want to make changes to the government?’ She said, ‘ Yes.’ ”

Hill read the names: Donald J. Trump. Joe Biden. Leach, a self- described yellow- dog Democrat, put her f inger on her candidate of choice. The next time Hill visited her mother through the nursing home window — and the time after that — she reported the election results. “It was good news a couple of times in a row,” Hill said.

Because of her dementia, Leach would not remember the conversati­ons. So Hill

would remind her each time that Biden had won, and each time Leach would give her a thumbs up.

There was one other piece of repeated news that had the same effect.

“I would lead with, ‘ Mama, guess what? The Dodgers won the World Series!’ Her face would light up. She’d make a little, ‘ Oh!’ face. She was obviously excited. She was very happy.”

But those good times were the exception. Over the lengthy separation, the older woman began to withdraw. She lost strength and mobility. She got angry when nurses tried to wake her up.

Hill blames the combined insults of illness and isolation.

“If there wasn’t COVID and she broke her hip, we could go and sit with her all day,” Hill said. “We’d go in shifts. I’d go in for a while, and my sister would go in for a while. That emotional support makes a big difference. COVID just takes that away.”

But 11 days before Christmas, Leach’s long isolation came to an end.

Just after 12: 30 p. m. on Dec. 14, Hill and her sister, Laura Leach- Palm, drove up to the low- slung tan nursing home in the shadow of the San Gabriel Mountains.

Before leaving home, they had turned the back seat of the black Honda SUV into a comfortabl­e nest. There was a pillow encased in white f lannel and printed with dogs in holiday gear — antlers, scarves, Christmas sweaters. Leach’s favorite blanket, sky blue and white f leece with a snowflake pattern, was folded neatly on the seat.

A nurse rolled Leach out in a wheelchair. She wore bright red pajamas and purple f leece socks. Her hair was wispy and white. She clutched Poofey Woo on her lap.

Hill: “Guess how many days until you go home?”

Leach, pausing to think: “Two?”

Hill: “Zero! You’re going home!”

Leach: “Right now? Oh, boy. Goody, goody.”

Because Leach has been inactive for so long, she cannot stand or walk or even sit up without help.

Getting her from wheelchair to car was a lengthy ordeal, the cozy back seat an impossibil­ity. The drive home was slow and careful, the trip from car to wheelchair another delicate operation. Hill watched Marguerite roll Leach up a ramp and into the house.

“I told the nurse before we left the nursing home, ‘ Not everybody who comes here gets to go home,’ ” she said. She was pensive but happy. “We’re lucky kids,” she said. “We get our mom. It’s a great Christmas present.”

 ?? MARJORIE LEACH, Photog r aphs by Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? 101, sleeps with her stuffed animal Poofey Woo at Providence Holy Cross Medical Center in Mission Hills. She had been in therapy for a broken hip when she was exposed to the coronaviru­s.
MARJORIE LEACH, Photog r aphs by Francine Orr Los Angeles Times 101, sleeps with her stuffed animal Poofey Woo at Providence Holy Cross Medical Center in Mission Hills. She had been in therapy for a broken hip when she was exposed to the coronaviru­s.
 ??  ?? LEACH’S daughters Kathleen Hill, left, and Laura Leach- Palm visit her Dec. 10 at Mountain View Convalesce­nt Hospital in Sylmar.
LEACH’S daughters Kathleen Hill, left, and Laura Leach- Palm visit her Dec. 10 at Mountain View Convalesce­nt Hospital in Sylmar.
 ?? Photog r aphs by Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? MARJORIE LEACH eats lunch at Mountain View Convalesce­nt Hospital. Her daughter Kathleen Hill visits her through a window.
Photog r aphs by Francine Orr Los Angeles Times MARJORIE LEACH eats lunch at Mountain View Convalesce­nt Hospital. Her daughter Kathleen Hill visits her through a window.
 ??  ?? A WEAK but determined Leach returns home with assistance from her granddaugh­ter, Marguerite Hill, left, and daughter Laura Leach- Palm. Because she’d been inactive for so long, transporti­ng her was diff icult.
A WEAK but determined Leach returns home with assistance from her granddaugh­ter, Marguerite Hill, left, and daughter Laura Leach- Palm. Because she’d been inactive for so long, transporti­ng her was diff icult.
 ??  ?? LEACH speaks with her daughters over an iPad at Providence Holy Cross Medical Center. The pandemic “displaced her from her loved ones,” said Dr. Marwa Kilani, medical director of palliative care at the facility.
LEACH speaks with her daughters over an iPad at Providence Holy Cross Medical Center. The pandemic “displaced her from her loved ones,” said Dr. Marwa Kilani, medical director of palliative care at the facility.

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