Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

‘My mother’s losing her will to live’

Even with vaccines, nursing homes still off limits to many

- By Marina Villeneuve

HERKIMER, N.Y. — Vaccines have begun saving lives in New York’s nursing homes, but they haven’t yet cured another crisis caused by the pandemic: loneliness.

Persistent­ly high rates of COVID-19 have left the majority of the state’s nursing homes off limits to visitors, despite relaxed guidance meant to help reopen them.

Until this week, under state and federal rules, they could admit visitors only if they had no new infections among either patients or staff for 14 days.

That mark proved too hard for most to reach. A little more than half of the state’s 616 nursing homes were ineligible for indoor visits in mid-March, according to an Associated Press analysis of data from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.

New York updated its visitation rules last week in a way that will now allow visits to resume under certain conditions, even if a resident or staffer has recently tested positive. But that relaxed standard might not clear the way for visitation in many homes having trouble keeping the virus out.

The lack of visits has frustrated people like Debbie Barbano, who has been able to see her 69-year-old mother at a New York nursing home only through a window.

“When this hit last year, it was like a bullet to your chest,” Barbano said. “She didn’t understand why I wasn’t coming. It was like I was abandoning her.”

Under New York’s new guidelines, homes would still have to halt visits after any resident or staffer tested positive, but they could potentiall­y resume for some patients if a thorough round of further testing revealed the outbreak was confined to just one part of the facility.

It’s unclear, though, how that guidance will be applied and whether the change would mostly affect large homes with multiple buildings, floors or units with little mingling of staff or residents between units.

State Health Commission­er Howard Zucker has justified restrictio­ns on visits by pointing to a winter surge that infected 15,000 nursing home residents, killing at least 3,000.

The federal program to vaccinate nursing home residents has helped drive down COVID-19 outbreaks and deaths in nursing homes nationwide. In New York, 41 nursing home residents died of COVID-19 in the second week in March, down from 382 for the week ending Jan. 17.

Decreased infections nationwide have allowed 80% of nursing homes nationally eligible to open doors by mid-March.

Infections in New York are dropping more quickly among nursing home residents than among staffers. Some workers have been hesitant to take the vaccine. And as parts of New York City and its suburbs see an uptick in cases, the state’s data show just 68% of nursing home residents and 51% of staffers in New York City have been vaccinated.

“Nursing homes have finally started to see the light at the end of the tunnel,” said Christophe­r Laxton, executive director of the Society for Post-Acute and LongTerm

Care Medicine, whose group is seeking clarity on the new rules from the U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. “But we’re not out of the tunnel. We’re seeing the end of it.”

Meanwhile, some relatives are fighting to see loved ones.

Family members in New York and nationwide who have organized on Facebook groups say their loved ones are losing weight, falling, declining cognitivel­y, dying alone and suffering from lack of attention. Federal and state guidance allows compassion­ate care visits, but families in New York and elsewhere say nursing homes don’t always allow them.

Laura Corridi, 56, a senior programmer analyst in Hamlin, New York, has driven 90 minutes on the weekends to stand outside her 93-year-old mother’s nursing home and shout to her through a window throughout the past year.

“She gets very upset sometimes,” Corridi said. “She’ll say: ‘It’s cold out. You can’t be out there.’ She starts to cry, ‘Why don’t they let you in?’ She doesn’t want me standing out in the cold.”

State lawmakers passed a bill this year that would allow nursing home residents to designate as many as two caregivers who can visit them even if general visitation isn’t allowed, as long as they get tested and follow other infection protocols.

Gov. Andrew Cuomo hasn’t yet signed the legislatio­n, however, and his office didn’t respond to a request for comment on whether he intended to do so. His counsel Beth Garvey said Monday that the administra­tion wants to make sure the bill is in line with federal guidance.

Cuomo has taken political heat over recent revelation­s that his administra­tion did not disclose the full number of nursing home residents who died during the pandemic’s peak.

New York is one of at least 17 states where lawmakers are considerin­g similar legislatio­n, according to the AP review.

But many New Yorkers with relatives in nursing homes say their loved ones can’t wait for companions­hip.

“They’re dying now,” Karen Costner, of Greece, New York, said. “My mother’s losing her will to live every week. And I need to get in there now.”

 ?? JEFFREY T. BARNES/AP ?? Laura Corridi shows a photo to her mother, Emma Sahl, 93, on March 6 at Northgate Health Care Facility in North Tonawanda, New York.
JEFFREY T. BARNES/AP Laura Corridi shows a photo to her mother, Emma Sahl, 93, on March 6 at Northgate Health Care Facility in North Tonawanda, New York.

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