Outside the Andover Subacute and Rehabilitation Center, where police said 17 bodies were stored in a makeshift morgue at the nursing home in Andover, N.J. April, 16, 2020 Ed Murray |
Long before the anonymous tip that led to the discovery of 17 bodies in a makeshift morgue at Andover Subacute and Rehabilitation Center, there were problems at the state’s largest nursing home.
There weren’t enough supplies. Staffing was short. Protective equipment was in short supply.
And as the coronavirus outbreak
began to engulf the facility in Sussex County, two nurses, one former
and one current, recalled how they would move the sick from room to room
with no masks, deal with filthy floors and corridors and handle beds
that were not disinfected even after residents died in them.
“It
was a horror house,” said one nurse, who said she tested positive for
COVID-19 and spoke on the condition of anonymity, for fear of losing her
job.
The coronavirus crisis has ravaged nursing homes across the state. Nearly 30% of New Jersey’s COVID-19 related
deaths were in long term care facilities or nursing homes, according to
Monday’s state department of health statistics. As of Monday afternoon,
a total 45 people had died at Andover, with 190 positive cases of
COVID-19, according to DOH numbers.
Neither
nurse was at Andover Subacute when the makeshift morgue was discovered
on April 13. One had already left and one was out on disability. But
both said they were working when more and more patients became ill and
started to die.
Trying
to care for more and more ailing patients without even the most basic
protective gear, some nursing home workers would fall ill themselves,
fighting an uphill battle against a lethal disease as it ravaged
residents who they tried to keep safe.
At
the same time, they said there was a stunning lack of transparency and
information, even among staff, as the crisis escalated.
“Early
on, they said they were preparing,” said the current nurse. “But they
never disclosed an exact number to us. Everything was kept kind of hush
hush amongst management.
According
to the nurses, the situation was already out of control in the weeks
leading up to the Easter weekend when 15 residents died.
Andover Subacute and Rehab is owned in part by Chaim “Mutty” Scheinbaum
through Lakewood-based Alliance Healthcare Holdings. Scheinbaum also
has ownership stakes in nursing homes in Pennsauken and Cinnaminson in
New Jersey, and two other nursing homes in Pennsylvania.
In
a statement released by Scheinbaum responding to questions from NJ
Advance Media, the 37-year old CEO of Alliance said across the country,
the virus has hit nursing home patients and their health care
professionals the hardest.
“With
one of the largest nursing home populations in the state, Andover
Subacute II is on the front lines of this crisis, cooperating with
public health officials to prioritize patient safety,” he said.
Andover
has two separate buildings: Andover I, a smaller facility that serves
those with less serious medical issues, and Andover II, a larger unit
with many dementia and Alzeimer’s residents, and others suffering from
schizophrenia and other mental problems.
BRINGING BODY BAGS
Andover
Subactute has been in the spotlight since the discovery that the
nursing home was holding 17 bodies in a makeshift morgue April 13, the
day after Easter Sunday.
The
facility’s existing morgue was little more than a small holding room
with a window and an air conditioner, meant to hold two gurneys.
“They’re
calling it a morgue,” one of the two nurses said. “It was nothing more
than what we called a holding room. Where a patient expired that’s where
they went before the funeral home picked them up. It’s disgraceful.”
The
township police had been asked to supply 25 body bags on Easter and
found five bodies being stored in a room in Andover II, Police Chief
Eric Danielson had said. The day after, police found 12 more bodies
being stored on site, officials said.
Even
before the pandemic hit the nursing home, supplies were scarce, said
employees. They would ask for supplies and were told they weren’t coming
since the bills were not being paid, said one nurse.
And
when the nursing home received a shipment of protective gear from the
Sussex County Sheriff’s Office, the home’s administration made it clear
that it was not available tor everyone, said one nurse.
The
first shipment of protective gear from the Sheriff’s Office arrived at
the center April 1, according to a statement from the Sussex County
Department of Health and Human Services.
“It
was kept under lock and key,” said the nurse. “It was not distributed
to the nurses, short of the isolation wing. It was kept under lock and
key. We were told ‘Go figure it out. If you want your own PPE, you have
to get it.’”
After
nurses approached the home’s administrator, demanding answers as to how
they could get protective equipment, an employee responsible for
ordering supplies allegedly chastised the group, telling them to watch
the news to see how scarce protective gear had become, the current nurse
said.
Eventually,
by early April, staff were given one mask each, said the current nurse.
The employees were told to wash and spray the mask with Lysol before
reusing it.
Although
Scheinbaum would not address the question of whether employees were
initially denied protective gear, he acknowledged the lack of protective
gear at the facility.
“Like
virtually every other healthcare facility across the region, Andover
Subacute II has faced challenges due to a general lack of PPE, as well
as staffing complications caused by front line workers becoming ill,”
said Scheinbaum.
At
the same time as nurses were struggling to keep themselves safe while
treating sick residents, they were being told to swab their patients as
part of the tests for the coronavirus, said the two employees. The
testing, which requires healthcare workers to get close to a patient and
swab their nasal cavity, was ordered without even the basic training
required, they said.
The
lack of protective gear and training led to a backlog of residents that
needed to be swabbed, said the former nurse. One man died before he
could be swabbed for COVID-19, said the former nurse.
“There was no swabs available and he expired before that swab could be done,” the nurse said.
As
the outbreak snowballed, nurses were moving patients from one wing to
another, sometimes transferring residents who were on the ground floor
to the second floor, and from the third floor back down to the ground
floor, said both the current and former nurses. They did this with no
protective gear, said the current nurse.
“Talk about cross contamination? Oh my god. Oh my god,” said the current nurse.
As
workers scrambled to move sick patients from one area of the hospital
to the other, they struggled with waning staff, said both employees. For
the 11 p.m. to 7 a.m. shift, there was one nurse covering two wings of
the facility, with more than 50 residents in each, one nurse said.
While
Scheinbaum did not address staffing for specific shifts, he said that
the illness affecting employees has caused the facility to operate with a
smaller staff than usual.
“While
Andover Subacute II has a full complement of licensed and qualified
staff, unfortunately some of its front line workers have been impacted
while fighting this pandemic and are unable to return to work at this
time,” he said in the statement. “The facility is working with the
Department to find replacements for those people who have become ill,
has already retained a licensed nursing home administrator consultant
along with a certified infectious disease consultant, and is otherwise
working to ensure that the facility has qualified professionals to deal
with this unprecedented health emergency.”
Scheinbaum
said that staff was given updates regularly, but did not specify if
staff were notified of new positive cases of COVID-19 as they were
reported.
“We
communicate regularly with our staff directors in daily meetings and
conference calls to provide the latest updates on what is happening
across our facility,” his statement said.
Separately, both employees said it was extremely difficult to get information to residents’ families.
“We
had families calling continuously,” said the current nurse. “They
didn’t want anything disclosed to families. They weren’t sharing the
details with us staff. It just goes on and on.”
At least three relatives of residents previously told NJ Advance Media that it was almost impossible to reach anybody at the home. Francesca Veen said it took her four hours to get through to the home to check on her grandmother.
The
facility has been barred by the state Department of Health from
admitting any new patients, and the state ordered Andover to retain an
infection control expert and key consultants.
One of the two nurses, though, said somebody needs to be held accountable.
Full Article & Source:
‘It was a horror house.’ Workers at N.J. nursing home said they didn’t have masks, sanitizer as crisis escalated.
No comments:
Post a Comment