Marin Independent Journal

College president offers inaugurati­on poet a job

- By Bethany Ao and Aubrey Whelan Distribute­d by Tribune News Service.

Morgan State University made the pitch to Amanda Gorman soon after her recital at the Biden swearing-in.

PHILADELPH­IA » In July, Erica Rodriguez, 20, checked herself into the Renfrew Center, a residentia­l center for eating-disorder treatment in the Philadelph­ia area. Rodriguez, who has been struggling with disordered eating since she was 12, had relapsed in quarantine.

“It had gotten to the point that I was feeling a bad physical toll,” she said. “The day before I decided to go, it was getting hard to breathe. I would stand up and feel super dizzy and faint. It felt like I was having a panic attack because my heart was beating so fast all the time.”

After five days at the Renfrew Center, staff members recommende­d she complete eight weeks of inpatient treatment.

But that changed the very next day. Rodriguez was told that she had to leave the center immediatel­y because a staff member she had been in contact with had tested positive for COVID-19. She was told that she could come back in two weeks if she tested negative but that the facility could not guarantee her a bed.

“They discharged me with a new medication,” Rodriguez said. “I was left with no help.”

The many stressors brought on by the coronaviru­s pandemic have led to increased substance use, mental health issues, and disordered eating behaviors. Experts predict that the pandemic may lead to an increase in deaths of despair, a term for early deaths among young and midlife Americans, from suicide, drug overdoses and alcoholism. Overdoses in Philadelph­ia are expected to hit an all-time high in 2020; nationwide, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recently reported the highest-ever number of fatal overdoses nationally in a 12-month period.

Many residentia­l treatment centers around the country have experience­d more demand for their services during the pandemic — and serious struggles with containing the virus.

In Cape Cod, Massachuse­tts, a detox center weathered criticisms for having lax COVID-19 policies after seven patients and six staff members tested positive this month. In New Hampshire, patients complained about a lack of social distancing and mask-wearing at one of the state’s biggest residentia­l substance-use disorder treatment facilities, which battled an outbreak that affected at least 50 people.

In October, about 80 patients at the 270-bed Kirkbride Center in West Philadelph­ia tested positive for coronaviru­s — the addiction treatment center’s second outbreak since the beginning of the pandemic. Public health experts who worked with the facility to contain the spread said they “did everything right,” taking dramatic measures to contain it — but because the virus can often spread without symptoms, it was difficult to detect early.

Residentia­l treatment centers have long included in-person therapy sessions, support groups, and family visits in their programs. Part of the challenge now is delivering those treatments virtually, said Gina Marchando, CEO of Seabrook House, an addiction treatment facility in New Jersey owned by Summit BHC.

“Research shows addiction is a family disease to some degree,” Marchando said. “So although we’ve been able to include family virtually, you still miss out on that family dynamic. There’s something so critical about getting that family system together in one room with a skilled clinician to be able to really understand, gauge and assess those dynamics.”

Marchando said the facility requires all residents to be tested for COVID-19, and quarantine­s those waiting for results.

A former employee, though, said staff and residents who had come into contact with people who tested positive for COVID hadn’t been notified of their exposure, even though some had shared rooms.

The former employee, who asked that their name be withheld for fear of reprisals, also noted that a nurse manager at the facility told staffers that even if they were exposed to the virus, they weren’t required to quarantine while they awaited COVID-19 test results. The manager encouraged staff to take vitamins to boost their immune systems, and said that testing had to be approved by the facility’s human resources division and would be provided only for staffers who had a “true exposure” to the virus. Seabrook did not respond to a follow-up request to comment on the employee’s claims.

Renfrew requires patients to submit a negative COVID-19 test result that is not older than 14 days before they are admitted. After taking the test, Renfrew expects patients to self-quarantine until they enter the treatment center. Patients who are at higher risk, such as those who live on college campuses or have been in large gatherings, are required to provide two negative results. At the facility, all staff and patients are required to wear face masks and no visitors are allowed inside, said Franci Kraman, a physician at Renfrew, in a written statement.

“Any patient who tests positive for COVID is immediatel­y discharged and supported through our virtual programmin­g,” Kraman said. “Out of an abundance of caution, we also discharge patients who are defined as close contact. During the quarantine period, the discharged individual­s are able to attend our virtual services. After the quarantine period, our admissions department works closely with the patient to ensure a seamless transition back to campus.”

Rodriguez opted not to participat­e in virtual programmin­g and hasn’t returned to Renfrew to continue her treatment, partially because she needed to return to work.

 ?? ELIZABETH ROBERTSON— THE PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER ?? Gina Marchando, CEO of Seabrook House, an addiction treatment facility in New Jersey, said part of the program’s challenge now is delivering family visits virtually.
ELIZABETH ROBERTSON— THE PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER Gina Marchando, CEO of Seabrook House, an addiction treatment facility in New Jersey, said part of the program’s challenge now is delivering family visits virtually.

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