Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

As cases hit record highs, nursing homes plan for visitors’ return

- By Kris B. Mamula

Pittsburgh-area nursing homes are taking a careful approach to reopening to visitors as the number of COVID-19 cases spikes to record levels and deadlines loom for testing staff and residents for the highly contagious disease.

None of the biggest nursing homes in Western Pennsylvan­ia have yet posted visitation rules and procedures on their websites, among the state requiremen­ts issued over the weekend to help determine when doors can be reopened to visitors. At the same time, some operators are scrambling to meet a July 24 deadline for testing all staff and residents for the disease, which also has to happen before visits can begin.

Developmen­t of visitation plans is occurring as the number of new COVID-19 cases has been breaking records in Allegheny County, with new cases nearly quadruplin­g to 290 cases in two weeks in June, according to the state Department of Health. The sudden spike is complicati­ng plans for reopening nursing homes, which account for 70% of COVID-19 deaths in Pennsylvan­ia, including staff and residents.

“We’re going to give it our best shot, but it’s going to be complicate­d,” Presbyteri­an SeniorCare spokeswoma­n Lisa Fischetti said. “What you don’t want to do is open the door a little bit, then have to shut it again.”

Pennsylvan­ia has about 700 nursing homes where 76,652 people live. Visitors have been banned since March due to the COVID-19 outbreak, but facilities have made arrangemen­ts for

“window visits” and sometimes visits outside on facility patios or in courtyards.

On Saturday, the state issued updated guidance on what will be required before visitation can start, including a list of prerequisi­tes such as operating in a county in the yellow or green phase, having adequate personal protective gear, and adhering to written screening protocols for everyone entering the facilities.

Oakmont-based longterm care giant Presby SeniorCare, which operates 15 residentia­l communitie­s in Western Pennsylvan­ia, has about 1,100 skilled nursing patients and staff to test before the state-mandated deadline.

After testing is done, the state health department requires a two-week COVID-19-free period before visits can resume at facilities.

No date has been set for the restart of visits at Presby SeniorCare, Ms. Fischetti said.

Greensburg-based Redstone Highlands, which operates three long-term care facilities in Westmorela­nd County, has tentativel­y set mid-July for the resumption of visits, but the timeline could slip, COO Vicki Loucks said.

“Window visits and Skype are helpful, but it’s not the same,” she said. “It’s been a rough couple months for everybody.”

Officials at Adams-based Lutheran SeniorLife, which operates long-term care facilities in Zelienople and Mars, say some form of visitation may start in a week, but details were still being worked out. The Jewish Associatio­n on Aging, which runs the Charles Morris Nursing & Rehabilita­tion Center and four other senior living centers, said the associatio­n was still sorting out guidance from the state Department of Health.

“We’re still processing all the directives that have come along,” JAA spokeswoma­n Tinsy Labrie said. “It’s just so fresh. We’re all scrambling.”

Like Presby SeniorCare, Concordia Lutheran Ministries of Jefferson, Butler County, which operates 14 long-term care facilities, has been rushing to get baseline COVID-19 testing done for its skilled care residents and 3,000 employees before the deadline.

A mid-August restart of visits is anticipate­d, which would ease the hardship the shutdown has caused patients and families, COO Brian Hortert said.

“This is just brutal,” he said. “No one ever thought they’d put mum in a personal care home and not be able to see her for months.”

At least one health care administra­tor and 25-year patient advocate believes the suspension of nursing home visits contribute­d to the death of his mother-in-law, despite getting excellent care in the long-term care facility where she was living.

Jeff Weinberg, of Squirrel Hill, said his otherwise healthy mother-in-law, Sarah Steckel, 97, was confused by FaceTime visits and eventually lost interest in living because of the isolation she experience­d.

“You lose your sense of purpose. You have nothing to look forward to,” said Mr. Weinberg, who called social isolation the second pandemic. “No one is looking at this from a psychologi­cal perspectiv­e and what it’s doing to people.

“They’re suffering greatly.”

Kris B. Mamula: kmamula@post-gazette.com or 412263-1699.

 ?? Alexandra Wimley/Post-Gazette ?? A staff member helps Elliott Tanack, a resident of the Jewish Associatio­n on Aging’s Charles Morris Nursing and Rehabilita­tion Center, speak to his daughter, Ellen Jones, of McCandless, through a Plexiglass barrier during a visit Wednesday at the facility in Squirrel Hill.
Alexandra Wimley/Post-Gazette A staff member helps Elliott Tanack, a resident of the Jewish Associatio­n on Aging’s Charles Morris Nursing and Rehabilita­tion Center, speak to his daughter, Ellen Jones, of McCandless, through a Plexiglass barrier during a visit Wednesday at the facility in Squirrel Hill.
 ?? Alexandra Wimley/Post-Gazette ?? Elliott Tanack, a resident of the Jewish Associatio­n on Aging's Charles Morris Nursing and Rehabilita­tion Center, listens as his daughter, Ellen Jones, of McCandless, speaks to him through a Plexiglass barrier at the facility.
Alexandra Wimley/Post-Gazette Elliott Tanack, a resident of the Jewish Associatio­n on Aging's Charles Morris Nursing and Rehabilita­tion Center, listens as his daughter, Ellen Jones, of McCandless, speaks to him through a Plexiglass barrier at the facility.

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