Toronto Star

Most home health aides ‘can’t afford not to work’

And many in U.S. do so without proper personal protective equipment

- ELI CAHAN

In March, Sue Williams-Ward took a new job, with a $1-anhour raise.

The employer, a home health care agency called Together We Can, was paying a premium — $13 (U.S.) an hour — after it started losing aides when safety concerns mounted over COVID-19.

Williams-Ward, a 68-year-old Indianapol­is resident, was a devoted caregiver who bathed, dressed and fed clients as if they were family. She was known to entertain clients with some of her own 26 grandchild­ren, even inviting her clients along on charitable deliveries of Thanksgivi­ng turkeys and Christmas hams.

Without her, the city’s most vulnerable would have been “lost, alone or mistreated,” said her husband, Royal Davis.

Despite her husband’s fears for her health, Williams-Ward reported to work March16 at an apartment with three elderly women. One was blind, one was wheelchair-bound and the third had a severe mental illness. None had been diagnosed with COVID-19 but, WilliamsWa­rd confided in Davis, at least one had symptoms of fatigue and shortness of breath, now associated with the virus.

Even after a colleague on the night shift developed pneumonia, Williams-Ward tended to her patients — without protective equipment, which she told her husband she’d repeatedly requested from the agency. Together We Can did not respond to multiple phone and email requests for comment about the PPE available to its workers.

Still, Davis said, “Sue did all the little, unseen, everyday things that allowed them to maintain their liberty, dignity and freedom.”

He said that, within three days, Williams-Ward was coughing, too. After six weeks in a hospital and weeks on a ventilator, she died of COVID-19. Hers is one of more than 1,200 health worker COVID deaths that KHN and The Guardian are investigat­ing, including those of dozens of home health aides.

During the pandemic, home health aides have buttressed the U.S. health-care system by keeping the most vulnerable patients — seniors, the disabled, the infirm — out of hospitals. Yet, even as they’ve put themselves at risk, this workforce of 2.3 million — of whom nine in 10 are women, nearly twothirds are minorities and almost one-third are foreignbor­n — has largely been overlooked.

Home health providers scavenged for their own face masks and other protective equipment, blended disinfecta­nt and fabricated sanitizing wipes amid widespread shortages. They’ve often done it all on poverty wages, without overtime or hazard pay, sick leave and health insurance. And they’ve gotten sick and died — leaving little to their survivors.

Speaking out about their work conditions during the pandemic has triggered retaliatio­n by employers, according to representa­tives of the Service Employees Internatio­nal Union in Massachuse­tts, California and Virginia. “It’s been shocking, egregious and unethical,” said David Broder, president of SEIU Virginia 512.

The pandemic has laid bare deeply ingrained inequities among health workers, as Broder puts it: “This is exactly what structural racism looks like today in our health care system.”

Every worker who spoke with KHN for this article said they felt intimidate­d by the prospect of voicing their concerns. All have seen colleagues fired for doing so. They agreed to talk candidly about their work environmen­ts on the condition their full names not be used.

Tina, a home health provider, said she has faced these challenges in Springfiel­d, Mass., one of the nation’s poorest cities.

Like many of her colleagues — 82 per cent, according to a survey by the National Domestic Workers Alliance — Tina has lacked protective equipment throughout the pandemic. Her employer is a family-owned company that gave her one surgical mask and two pairs of latex gloves a week to clean body fluids, change wound dressings and administer medication­s to incontinen­t or bedridden clients.

When Tina received the company’s do-it-yourself blueprints — to make masks from holepunche­d sheets of paper towel reinforced with tongue depressors and gloves from garbage bags looped with rubber bands — she balked.

“It felt like I was in a Third World country,” she said.

The home health agencies that Tina and others in this article work for declined to comment on work conditions during the pandemic.

In other workplaces — hospitals, mines, factories — employers are responsibl­e for the conditions in which their employees operate. Understand­ing the plight of home health providers begins with American labour law.

The Fair Labor Standards Act, which forms the basis of protection­s in the American workplace, was passed in an era dually marked by former U.S. president Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s New Deal changes and marred by the barriers of the Jim Crow era. The act excluded domestic care workers — including maids, butlers and home health providers — from protection­s such as overtime pay, sick leave, hazard pay and insurance. Likewise, standards set by the Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion three decades later carved out “domestic household employment activities in private residences.”

“A deliberate decision was made to discrimina­te against coloured people — mostly women — to unburden distinguis­hed elderly white folks from the responsibi­lity of employment,” said Ruqaiijah Yearby, a law professor at St. Louis University.

In 2015, several of these exceptions were eliminated, and protection­s for home health providers became “very well regulated on paper,” said Nina Kohn, a professor specializi­ng in civil rights law at Syracuse University. “But the reality is, non-compliance is a norm and the penalties for non-compliance are toothless.”

Burkett McInturff, a civil rights lawyer working on behalf of home health workers, said, “The law itself is very clear. The problem lies in the ability to hold these companies accountabl­e.”

The Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion has “abdicated its responsibi­lity for protecting workers” in the pandemic, said Debbie Berkowitz, director of the National Employment Law Project. Berkowitz is also an ex-OSHA chief. She says political and financial decisions in recent years have hollowed out the agency: It now has the fewest inspectors and conducts the fewest inspection­s per year in its history.

Furthermor­e, some home health-care agencies have classified home health providers as contractor­s, akin to gig workers such as Uber drivers. This loophole protects them from the responsibi­lities of employers, said Seema Mohapatra, an Indiana University associate professor of law.

Should workers contract COVID-19, they are unlikely to receive remunerati­on or damages.

Demonstrat­ing causality — that a person caught the coronaviru­s on the job — for workers’ compensati­on has been extremely difficult, Berkowitz said. As with other health-care jobs, employers have been quick to point out workers might have caught the virus at the gas station, grocery store or home.

Many home health providers care for multiple patients, who also bear the consequenc­es of their work conditions.

Nonetheles­s, caregivers like Samira, in Richmond, Va., have little choice but to work. Samira — who makes $8.25 an hour with one client and $9.44 an hour with another, and owes tens of thousands of dollars in hospital bills from previous work injuries — has no other option but to risk getting sick. “I can’t afford not to work. And my clients, they don’t have anybody but me,” she said. “So I just pray every day I don’t get it.”

“This is exactly what structural racism looks like today in our health-care system.” DAVID BRODER SEIU VIRGINIA 51 PRESIDENT

 ?? TAMARYA BURNETT ?? Sue Williams-Ward — pictured with her granddaugh­ter Tamarya Burnett — was a home health aide who died of COVID-19 on May 2 after six weeks in the hospital.
TAMARYA BURNETT Sue Williams-Ward — pictured with her granddaugh­ter Tamarya Burnett — was a home health aide who died of COVID-19 on May 2 after six weeks in the hospital.

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