Houston Chronicle

Nursing home visits in France prove bitterswee­t

- By John Leicester

PARIS — For her first authorized visit in more than six weeks with her 80-year-old mother, Sabrina Deliry prepared a selection of their favorite tunes, among them Edith Piaf’s “La Vie en Rose.”

Later, at the Paris nursing home where the mother has been agonizing in the solitude of her room, feeling imprisoned and miserable without the sun on her cheeks, the breeze in her hair or her daughter’s tender hugs, they listened to the French songbird together.

“When he takes me in his arms,” Piaf wailed.

With mother and daughter forced to sit 3 feet apart, unable to hug or hold each other during their half-hour visit in the home’s fenced-off small garden, the words rang like a cruel joke.

When might Sabrina get to take Patricia, her mother, in her arms again? No one can say for sure. Likely no time soon.

Even before many businesses rumble back to life or schoolyard­s bustle again, France started to allow tightly regulated nursing home visits this week, puncturing a strict no-visitors lockdown that still failed to prevent an ongoing tidal wave of coronaviru­s deaths among elderly nursing home residents.

For some, seeing their parents again brought joy and relief.

“I know how important it is for her,” Christophe­r Cronenberg­er said after seeing his 87-year-old mother, Germaine, with a broad table and red-and-white plastic tape in between.

“We do have the telephone and my mother is still lucid. We speak by telephone every day. I knew things were OK, but visual contact is better,” he said.

But for others, the visits are proving bitterswee­t: Better than nothing, but nowhere close to being enough. After all, how can a few minutes, sat across a table in face masks, make up for so many days apart?

Sabrina and Patricia were on the phone to each other minutes after they said goodbye with blown air kisses and the mother trundled back alone to her room in her motorized wheelchair, giving a final wave.

“Stopping us from seeing our children is a crime,” she said. “They wait for us to die before sending our children to us.”

The visit, she said, “makes me want to live again.”

But the next can’t come soon enough.

“We are in prison,” Patricia said.

As the virus raced through Europe, the hardest-hit countries — Italy, Spain, Britain, France — banned nursing home visits to protect the elderly, who are particular­ly vulnerable to the novel coronaviru­s. From Belgium to Turkey, several other countries did the same.

Nursing homes have been hard hit around the world. In France, more than one-third of the over 21,300 deaths reported have occurred in care homes.

The emotional toll of cutting off the homes has been immense and largely untold because the suffering has been taking place behind sealed-shut nursing home doors.

Now that visits are being allowed again, a fuller picture of the agony is starting to emerge.

French President Emmanuel Macron has taken notice.

He led the push in March to seal off homes before the rest of the country, pleading publicly for people to stop visiting their elderly relatives before he ordered France into a nationwide lockdown March 17.

This week, Macron retweeted a painful-to-watch interview with a 96-year-old nursing home resident, Jeanne Pault, complainin­g tearfully about being stuck in her room, deprived of the daily visits she used to get from her husband and family.

“I’m locked in here all day. It’s not a life,“she said. “My neighbor hasn’t got the virus. Neither have I. We could see each other from time to time, chat a little.”

In his tweet, Macron wrote: “Madame, your pain overwhelms us all. For you, for all of our elders in retirement homes or establishm­ents, visits by loved ones are now allowed. Always with one priority: to protect you.”

But among families, fury is mounting. Some are filing legal complaints accusing care homes of neglect and endangerin­g lives.

“It sickens me,” Sabrina said. “Those are our parents behind those walls, my mother, our fathers. They have no right to deprive us of them like that.”

 ?? Jean-Francois Badias / Associated Press ?? Monique Hernent, 65, waves goodbye to her sister visiting her at the Kaysersber­g nursing home in eastern France. Limited visits to the facilities now are being offered.
Jean-Francois Badias / Associated Press Monique Hernent, 65, waves goodbye to her sister visiting her at the Kaysersber­g nursing home in eastern France. Limited visits to the facilities now are being offered.

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