The Morning Call (Sunday)

Medical response teams saved lives in our nursing homes

- Margaret Barajas is Pennsylvan­ia’s state long-term care ombudsman.

Few Americans have suffered more throughout the COVID-19 pandemic than our loved ones in long-term care.

In Pennsylvan­ia, more than 157,000 older adults and individual­s with disabiliti­es living in long-term facilities have been disproport­ionately and, in some cases, unnecessar­ily impacted. As part of a comprehens­ive strategy to protect them, the commonweal­th launched the Regional Response Health Collaborat­ion Program, which works in concert with the Pennsylvan­ia National Guard.

As Pennsylvan­ia’s state long-term care ombudsman, the commonweal­th’s chief advocate for nursing home-residents’ rights and quality of care, I have seen firsthand how the RRHCP directly, strategica­lly and effectivel­y supports our vulnerable long-term care communitie­s through coordinate­d site preparatio­n, infection prevention, outbreak response and staff education.

These response teams are the embodiment of our commonweal­th’s strategic approach to fighting the spread of the virus within long-term care settings such as nursing home-and-assisted living communitie­s. They are real-life heroes who provide vulnerable residents, worried families and exhausted direct care workers help and hope.

In June 2020, the Pennsylvan­ia General Assembly allocated $175 million from Pennsylvan­ia’s CARES Act funding to establish the RRHCP. It is a partnershi­p between Pennsylvan­ia Department of Human Services, Department of Health and Pennsylvan­ia Emergency Management Agency to provide clinical and operationa­l support to longterm care facilities in responding to the COVID-19 pandemic.

However, federal funding supporting this life-saving support team is scheduled to end Dec. 30, just as our commonweal­th is facing its greatest surge in COVID-19 cases. We cannot allow this to happen.

The Wolf administra­tion has called for the federal government to reauthoriz­e Title 32 to support National Guard deployment in these life-saving missions and is working with the Pennsylvan­ia Congressio­nal Delegation to advocate for greater support at the federal level.

I feel compelled to share my perspectiv­e on why this support is so critical and why we need our federal and state leadership to continue to be responsive to and supportive of the RRHCs and National Guard in caring for our older adults.

Throughout this pandemic, members of my team and I have worked side-byside with the University of Pennsylvan­ia in partnershi­p with Temple University Hospital; Thomas Jefferson University in partnershi­p with Main Line Health and Lehigh Valley Health Network; and the Pennsylvan­ia State University when long-term care facilities have experience­d COVID-19 outbreaks they would not have been able to address on their own.

We ensure resident advocacy takes place in collaborat­ion with the RRHCs, DOH and DHS. We ensure residents’ rights under federal and state regulation­s are upheld throughout the RRHC missions, such as consent to transfer, support of resident choice in transfers, serving as an advocacy point of contact for loved ones and legal decision-makers when transfers are proposed. Additional­ly, ombudsmen uphold the residents’ right to quality individual­ized care before, during, and after the RRHC missions.

Initially, my concern was that the presence of the Pennsylvan­ia National Guard members in a facility with the RRHC medical staff in full personal protective equipment would be jarring and alarming to residents.

I was wrong.

In fact, the presence of the National Guard and the RRHCP clinical staff, nurses and medics signaled to the residents and their loved ones that coordinate­d help had arrived. Meals were back on schedule. Staffing levels were made adequate and call bells were answered in a timely fashion.

Protocols were securely put in place to stop the infection from spreading. Residents stopped getting sick and, more importantl­y, they stopped dying.

Residents and their families have expressed nothing but gratitude for the systems the commonweal­th has created to protect and preserve their lives.

The Office of the Long-Term Care Ombudsman commends the RRHCs, along with the women and men of the National Guard, for their expertise and the vital role they play in keeping longterm care residents safe while ultimately decreasing the number of cases and deaths of Pennsylvan­ians.

Without the continued critical services and support of RRHCPs, long-term care facilities will be ill-prepared to respond to outbreaks, just as they were in the first wave.

We now know that when facilities try to care for residents, while simultaneo­usly trying to respond to a COVID19 outbreak, it places all residents and employees at risk. Therefore, the longterm care industry should welcome and embrace the support being provided by the RRHCs during this critical time.

All older adults living in long-term care deserve — and all who care for them must demand — that this program be sustained.

 ?? APRILGAMIZ/THE MORNING CALL ?? The Pennsylvan­ia National Guard helped Gracedale Nursing Home in Upper Nazareth Township and other long-term care facilities during the COVID-19 pandemic.
APRILGAMIZ/THE MORNING CALL The Pennsylvan­ia National Guard helped Gracedale Nursing Home in Upper Nazareth Township and other long-term care facilities during the COVID-19 pandemic.
 ?? Margaret Barajas ??
Margaret Barajas

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States