The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Nursing home residents get visits by loved ones

Restrictio­ns have been eased for senior facilities and assisted- living communitie­s in the state.

- By Helena Oliviero helena. oliviero@ ajc. com

After almost a year of no physical contact, and week after week of seeing her mother only on video calls, Lisa Hecht leaned in Thursday for a hug.

“I love you ,” she told Fran Lefkoff again and again, eager to connect with the 86- year- old whose Alzheimer’s had rapidly progressed since their last faceto- face visit.

At first, Lefkofl' said nothing. Then, a couple of minutes into their embrace, came her response: “I love you.”

It was the moment Hecht had waited for since last March, when the William Breman Jewish Home, along with all the other nursing homes and assisted- living communitie­s in the state, were forced to ban visitors to stanch the spread of the coronaviru­s.

Thursday, the state eased those restrictio­ns, allowing the facilities to welcome back the residents’ loved ones.

But exactly what that welcoming looked like varied from one

facility to the next.

Right now, there’s different guidance from state officials and federal authoritie­s. Nursing homes must adhere to the policies of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, or CMS, as well as the Georgia Department of Public Health. Assisted- living facilities have no federal oversight and must only follow the guidelines from the state.

Some facilities have not yet resumed visits, saying they need time to figure out the safest way for visits to take place.

Corona virus cases and deaths at long- term care residences have plummeted over recent weeks, falling 68% in February. At the same time, vaccinatio­ns have accelerate­d. Most long- term care residents in Georgia have been vaccinated. The trend line of decreasing cases and deaths is continuing in March.

State guidelines say indoor visits will cease at any facility that’s had a single corona virus case in the previous 14 days. CMS guidelines allow for visits to continue as long as the resident and those in nearby rooms can be shut off from the rest of the facility.

“Right now, every longterm care community is assembling their team and doing training to have safe visits based on the new guidelines,” said Ginny Helms, president and CEO of Leading age Georgia, which represents nonprofit and mission- driven senior care organizati­ons .“There will be some variation of what will be allowed, but everyone is working very hard to make these visits happen.”

Helms said long- term care communitie­s are devising protocols, such as requiring visitors to wear masks at all times in common areas.

And they aren’t just opening their doors for more visits. Nursing homes and assisted- living facilities are also returning to communal dining, group activities and on- site hair salons.

Mark Lowell, executive director of St. George Village in Roswell, said the community will resume normal activities gradually.

“We meet every week to discuss our reopening,” he said. “All al ong, we have been very careful. And, just as we were measured as we were closing things down, we needed to be very thorough and measured, and we need to use that same approach as we are opening up.”

For many family members, resuming visits is tinged with sadness. On Thursday, William Kendrick was at the William Breman Jewish Home. He placed his hand on his mother’s cheek and told her, “It’s so great to finally see you.” But he could see his mother’s decline, and it hurt.

“It was hard,” said Kendrick, an only child, shaking his head and tearing up.

“I think not seeing her on a regular basis, that lack of continuity. She just seemed so sad.”

At St. George Village, the a t mosphere was most l y cheerful, Lowell said.

“Let me tell you, I see a lot of smiles on residents’ faces, and the atmosphere in the community has lightened up a great deal with residents knowing their vaccinated loved ones can come into the building and visit them,” he said, noting unvaccinat­ed loved ones can still visit but with more restrict i ons, such as masks and social distancing.

While Sue Shaw has been able to have a few visits with her father, Gene Stelten, over the past year outside, Thursday marked the first time in a year she got to see him in his apartment at St. George Village. Both vaccinated, they got the green light to spend time together without masks or social distancing.

“Listen, I got a hug for the first time from Sue in a year. This was a real treat,” said Stelten.

Then he t ur ned t o hi s daughter and called her by her nickname: “Tiny Bell.”

Shaw said they had a lot of catching up to do and maybe a little work to do.

“I think I need to help you tidy up a little bit,” she said with a smile.

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN/ HYOSUB. SHIN@ AJC. COM ?? Lisa Hecht hugs her mother, Fran Lefkoffff, 86, as she visits her faceto- face after months of restrictio­n at The William Breman Jewish Home in Atlanta on Thursday.
HYOSUB SHIN/ HYOSUB. SHIN@ AJC. COM Lisa Hecht hugs her mother, Fran Lefkoffff, 86, as she visits her faceto- face after months of restrictio­n at The William Breman Jewish Home in Atlanta on Thursday.
 ?? PHOTOS BY HYOSUB SHIN/ HYOSUB. SHIN@ AJC. COM ?? Larry Schepps touches his great- granddaugh­ter, Penton Schepps, as Ann Schepps, his daughter- in- law, visits him at the Breman Jewish Home.
PHOTOS BY HYOSUB SHIN/ HYOSUB. SHIN@ AJC. COM Larry Schepps touches his great- granddaugh­ter, Penton Schepps, as Ann Schepps, his daughter- in- law, visits him at the Breman Jewish Home.
 ??  ?? Connie Kendrick and her son, William Kendrick, embrace as they see each other at The William Breman Jewish Home on Thursday in Atlanta.
Connie Kendrick and her son, William Kendrick, embrace as they see each other at The William Breman Jewish Home on Thursday in Atlanta.

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