Chattanooga Times Free Press

Virus poses challenges in group facilities

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In mid-May, Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee announced that Tennessean­s with intellectu­al and developmen­tal disabiliti­es served by state programs would receive universal COVID-19 testing.

The results so far? In six group homes, multiple people have tested positive. Three intermedia­te care facilities — which typically house individual­s with severe or profound disabiliti­es who are also medically fragile — have also experience­d outbreaks.

As of June 4, almost 2,100 of the 12,000 people with intellectu­al or developmen­tal disabiliti­es served by the Department of Intellectu­al or Developmen­tal Disabiliti­es have been tested for the virus, according to an agency spokeswoma­n.

Fifty are now positive for COVID-19.

The testing plan has been hampered, in part, by resistance from individual­s and their families, said Cara Kumari, a department spokeswoma­n.

“We do need to obtain consent from the person [if legally competent] or the conservato­r before administer­ing a test,” Kumari said. “Obtaining consent has been a barrier, mainly since some people are afraid of a test.”

Individual­s with intellectu­al disabiliti­es, defined as possessing an IQ of less than 70, and those with developmen­tal disabiliti­es — Down Syndrome or cerebral palsy, for example — are served by state programs intended to help adults live as independen­tly as possible.

The Tennessee Department of Developmen­tal and Intellectu­al Disabiliti­es offered guidance to hospitals for treating people with disabiliti­es during the COVID-19 pandemic.

While some remain at home with parents as caregivers, others live in group homes with other men and women possessing similar abilities. The most physically and mentally fragile individual­s live in intermedia­te care facilities with round-the-clock care.

In Dickson County, where Dickson County Disability Services provides aid to 99 individual­s, most living in group homes, “many families” have resisted testing, said Katie Powers, associate director.

“Many chose not to because they weren’t having symptoms,” Powers said. “I think for some families it’s scary.”

In response, the state began offering an alternativ­e COVID19 test that is less invasive than the nasal swab, known as a “neopharyng­eal” test, Kumari said. The anterior nares test uses a swab in the front of the nose rather than deep into the nasal cavity.

“This has helped tremendous­ly,” Kumari said.

The state requires agencies it contracts with to provide care to people with disabiliti­es to report all positive tests of staff or individual­s served in

no more than four hours after receiving results. The department tracks contacts with housemates and staff who have worked in the home, she said.

Private agencies who care for individual­s are expected to follow quarantine protocols.

“Most people reside in homes of four or less, with a few still in larger homes,” Kumari said. “This has allowed us to minimize the spread in our population thus far.”

Powers said the pandemic has forced individual­s with disabiliti­es into a form of extreme, protective isolation, kept from walks, outings to grocery stores and restaurant­s.

“It’s affecting people emotionall­y more than physically right now,” Powers said. “They used to have to be out for six hours a day, and all of a sudden they’re home. Some of them love it because they don’t have to be up at a certain time. They can watch TV all day. But for other people, you can tell, in the last couple of weeks, they’ve become antsy.”

In the past two weeks, Powers said, they have taken individual­s out in small groups, but are avoiding all public places.

“So they’ve been just riding around because we’re still scared. I’m not going to say we aren’t scared still.”

Powers’ agency, and 200 staff, provide roundthe-clock care to most of the 99 people living in group homes as well as a few who remain at home with family.

The agency is struggling financiall­y because of a quirk in rules regarding state funding. Since many of their clients are now confined to their homes, the state is reimbursin­g them for a lower “homebound rate” to pay their staff to provide the meals, bathing and other care required instead of the higher rate provided to take individual­s out to restaurant­s, stores, movies or other outings.

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