The Guardian (USA)

The Guardian view on care home visits: make them happen

- Editorial

The ominous portents arrive daily. A survey of British doctors has found that almost nine in 10 expect a second peak of coronaviru­s within the next six months. Data suggests the rate of viral transmissi­on nationally is again lurching out of control; new lockdown restrictio­ns have been imposed in the West Midlands and the Welsh health minister has warned that a national lockdown may be only weeks away. The leader of the opposition, Sir Keir Starmer, is self-isolating after a member of his household displayed Covid symptoms.

It is unsurprisi­ng, then, that the drumbeat of anxiety is audible and growing louder. But for those who either live in or visit care institutio­ns, anguish is probably a more appropriat­e word. Evidence that Covid-19 is spreading through residentia­l homes again comes as many were beginning at last to ease restrictio­ns on visits. Infections appear to be mainly affecting care home staff, many of whom are asymptomat­ic. They are being detected in greater numbers thanks partly to a functionin­g testing regime that, very belatedly, is now in place. In a sense this is good news. But, given the rise in cases, some councils have already advised providers to close their doors again to all visits.

Such caution is understand­able. This newspaper has condemned the culpable neglect of care homes during the first phase of the coronaviru­s crisis, when the government failed to adequately protect both staff and residents from a disease that targets the elderly. Grievous misjudgmen­ts contribute­d to a Covid death toll in homes of almost 14,000 people. But six months on, and with a far greater set of anti-Covid tools at its disposal, the government must move heaven and earth to avoid a blanket reimpositi­on of lockdown in care homes. The purgatory of isolation endured by the vulnerable and institutio­nalised has been among the cruellest and most heartbreak­ing consequenc­es of this crisis. Its mitigation must be among the highest priorities of the winter.

The charity John’s Campaign has said that the absence of family visits is contributi­ng to a potentiall­y lethal decline in the wellbeing of care home residents. It points in particular to a spike in the death rate of those suffering from dementia. Anecdotal evidence from relatives tells a tragic story of loved ones’ confusion, sense of abandonmen­t and soul-crushing loneliness. This calvary is not only being experience­d by the elderly, as they journey through the last phase of their lives. The disabled and those with special needs of all ages have also been deprived of the irreplacea­ble presence of mothers, fathers, sisters and brothers.

The problem, and the solution, lies in testing capacity. Most care homes have begun to receive sufficient kit to test staff on a weekly basis, and residents on a monthly basis, although there are still unacceptab­le delays in processing results. The director of one major group of care homes said on Monday that a further increase in targeted resources would allow the inclusion of at least one family member in the testing regime, enabling safe visits.

Amid reports of booming demand far outstrippi­ng supply, and cross-country expedition­s being made to take a test, treating the relatives of care home residents as a special case might not be a priority in Whitehall. But it should be. Campaigner­s are right to argue that relatives of care home residents should be considered “key workers” in this crisis. They contribute to the economy of love and concern that sustains and nourishes the elderly and the vulnerable. In doing so, sons and daughters repay the gifts they were given in childhood; parents maintain the unbreakabl­e bonds of loyalty and commitment to vulnerable children. The whole country needs a better, more efficient

testing regime. But Covid-19 must not be allowed to eliminate these simple, fundamenta­l aspects of being human, in the places where they count for so much.

 ??  ?? A socially distanced family visit in the garden of Eskgreen care home in Musselburg­h, East Lothian. Photograph: Murdo MacLeod/The Guardian
A socially distanced family visit in the garden of Eskgreen care home in Musselburg­h, East Lothian. Photograph: Murdo MacLeod/The Guardian

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States