Modern Healthcare

‘Even if they can’t see my mouth, they can see my eyes’

- —Ginger Christ

LAUREN HOFFMAN has been tested 27 times for COVID-19. She works as a speech language pathologis­t at a skilled-nursing, shortterm rehabilita­tion and memory-care facility in the Dallas area, where the rule is staffers don’t quarantine for exposure, only if they show up positive during their regularly scheduled tests.

“It felt like my life was put on the sacrificia­l altar because most people, if they have been exposed are told to quarantine; healthcare does not get that luxury,” said Hoffman, who has worked in skilled nursing for seven years.

Every day, she sees the anxiety and confusion on residents’ faces as they’re reminded to wear masks or told that their families can’t visit.

“It is really hard to make them feel safe and at home and want to stay and encourage them to not seek exits when they can’t see our face or how we are nice. All they see is our eyes and these scary masks,” Hoffman said.

While she loves her job, the pandemic has taken a personal toll. A former music major, Hoffman finds herself driving to work in silence now, instead of listening to music. Sometimes she sits in her car “doomscroll­ing” social media after work before heading home, even though she’s told her husband she’s on her way. She skips lunch because coworkers can no longer eat together.

“I find myself, some days, doing the bare minimum to get by and, once I get home, doing the bare minimum … but then feeling incredibly guilty for not doing more,” Hoffman said. Although at one point she brought home residents’ socks to pair and clothes to relabel because the housekeepi­ng staff couldn’t keep up.

“I love going to see my little old ladies and little old men, who have no idea what day it is anymore, and seeing their face light up when they see my goofy self walking down the hall waving at them,” Hoffman said. “It brings a smile to both our faces. Even if they can’t see my mouth, they can see my eyes.”

 ?? LAUREN HOFFMAN ?? Lauren Hoffman, a speech language pathologis­t, loves her work, but says the pandemic has taken a heavy toll.
LAUREN HOFFMAN Lauren Hoffman, a speech language pathologis­t, loves her work, but says the pandemic has taken a heavy toll.

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