By Blake Ellis and Melanie Hicken
Her nursing
home, she realized, was owned by the same company struggling to curtail a
rising death toll in Kirkland, Washington. Mayberry began to dread what
would happen if coronavirus swept through her building.
Soon
after this discovery, her facility in Bellflower, California,
instituted a lockdown in March, barring all visitors to try to keep the
disease out. Mayberry spent her days alone in her room.
Before
the pandemic, she passed the time watching hours of classic movies, but
now, as the black and white films played in the background, she scoured
the internet for news about what was happening in the outside world.
At
first, few local governments released information about how Covid-19
was ravaging the vulnerable populations residing in nursing homes. But
as data started coming out, Mayberry saw that the deaths in other
facilities were skyrocketing.
And
then, in mid-April, she said she learned from staff that a resident
somewhere in the building had tested positive for the disease.
Since the early days of the pandemic, nursing homes have been hit particularly hard -- grappling with
supply shortages
and accounting for tens of thousands of deaths. But it is difficult to
know what is actually happening inside these facilities, as measures
aimed at protecting residents from the spread of the disease have left
them even more vulnerable and closed off from the public.
They have been locked away from friends and family, routine government
inspections have been severely limited due to the virus and some employees
fear retaliation for raising concerns.
It is even more rare to hear from the residents themselves -- since
many suffer from dementia and other debilitating conditions or don't
have an outlet to share their stories.
Mayberry,
now 66, said she felt that local government officials weren't doing
enough to protect residents in nursing homes. She knew many of her
fellow residents didn't have the ability to speak out. But she had an
iPad and a Twitter account, so she began sending dispatches from the
inside of her room and hoped that someone would see them.
"As
a nursing home resident, I feel as though I am in #DeathCamp2020 and we
just got our first #COVID19 case 2 days ago," she wrote on April 12.
"No testing for staff or patients. Please help us."
***
Mayberry never envisioned spending the early years of her retirement in a nursing home.
She
had a nearly 40-year career at a local school district working as a
computer technician and retired in 2015, only to develop a dangerous
skin infection, she said. Then, she said she suffered a broken leg and
shattered ankle from a fall during her recovery. The injuries ultimately
left her bedridden as she attempted to find a way to pay for the
surgery she would need. She was single with no kids, and her brother
lived hundreds of miles away in Oregon. Because she needed full-time
care, Mayberry resorted to becoming a paying patient at the nursing
home, Bel Tooren Villa Convalescent Hospital, owned by the national
chain Life Care Centers of America.
She
had a surgery scheduled for the end of March that she hoped would
finally enable her to move back into the home she owns in Long Beach,
only around 15 minutes from her facility.
But then, coronavirus hit.
Mayberry
has always been outspoken. In earlier years, she wrote letters to the
editor of her local newspaper, opposing the renaming of her childhood
park and criticizing the "stock" obituary of a local woman and classic
film actress, saying she deserved much better. And she was already
active on Twitter before the pandemic, criticizing President Donald
Trump and sharing her love of old cinema with her modest list of
200-something followers, which includes a small stable of movie buffs.
|
Linda Mayberry |
The official Twitter account for the Los
Angeles City Attorney became a follower more recently, after Mayberry
saw a tweet about a price gouging investigation and responded with a
photo of the same bottle of hand sanitizer being sold for $80 that still
had its $1.99 price tag.
Now, as
she learned from several of the nurses taking care of her that a growing
number of employees and fellow residents were also testing positive for
the virus, she said she made it her mission to draw attention to people
like her, who are stuck in nursing homes where the coronavirus is
spreading.
In some cases, she replied directly to
tweets from government officials and journalists. In others, she simply
offered dispatches of what her life was like, detailing the outrage and
frustration she was feeling. She didn't know if anyone was seeing them,
but it made her feel like she was doing something.
"I could scream to the four walls here, but they don't listen very well," she said.
Mayberry tweeted about how she spent weeks asking to be tested -- and how it finally happened last month.
A nurse showed up in her room in
protective gear several days after her 66th birthday to deliver the
news. She was positive for the virus and needed to be moved to the
isolation unit -- which Mayberry described as starting with a hallway of
the facility blocked off by a thick layer of plastic that hung from the
ceiling to floor but growing to take over a large part of the building.
"Keeping
the sick here and not testing the staff was a recipe for disaster," she
told CNN in late May. "I am really pissed off. This didn't have to
happen."
When staff at her nursing
home discovered that she had been publicly voicing concerns about the
situation, she said she was "grilled by a corporate bigwig." A Life Care
spokesman told CNN that residents are free to speak with reporters and
that it would never punish someone for doing so. The company will speak
to residents concerned about their care to try to resolve any issues, he
added. Mayberry said she told them her anger was mainly directed at the
Department of Public Health in Los Angeles County, where her facility
is located, for failing to ensure that all employees were tested for
coronavirus until recently.
The first positive case had been
confirmed well into the facility's lockdown so Mayberry was convinced
that a staff member had unknowingly brought it to the facility. And as
they went room to room treating patients like her, she worried they
continued to spread it.
The
spokesman for Life Care said it was first notified of a positive case at
Bel Tooren on April 10 and acknowledged that "testing has been
constrained, and has taken longer than we'd have liked" -- noting that
testing for the facility has been coordinated through the county health
department.
"They have made the
decisions on when and who will be tested in our facility," he said. "Our
preference would have been to test both residents and staff sooner."
At first, the only personal possessions
that were brought to the makeshift isolation unit for her were her iPad
and iPhone. Her new room still had the belongings of someone else, she
said, including fake flowers and a dresser full of items that she was
afraid to touch.
She said her
temperature became slightly elevated and she noticed that her oxygen
levels were lower than usual when she checked them herself using a pulse
oximeter, but otherwise she said she was mainly asymptomatic.
Soon
after receiving her diagnosis, she began railing against people she
believed were being irresponsible and spreading the virus, using the
hashtag #Covidiots.
According to
Mayberry, she wasn't given a shower in more than a month, and that was
the last day she was helped out of bed until recently. She was given a
"bed bath" in mid-May, but claims that was only because she requested it
for her birthday.
"It's been a
little bit uncomfortable, but I understand they're just really, really
shorthanded," she said, adding that many of the nurses have become like
family to her. "You feel sort of guilty that they're giving up so much
to work here ... this isn't a job I would wish on anyone and they do it
with kindness."
After
CNN contacted the facility spokesman for comment, Mayberry said she was
retested and given a shower and moved from isolation -- suggesting that
her test result came back negative for coronavirus this time.
Her
biggest fear is that employees -- some of whom she said are older than
she is -- will stop coming to work entirely, as she has read about
happening at other nursing homes.
"I am afraid that I am going to be ignored to death here," she said.
The Life Care spokesman said he could not comment on specific patients
due to privacy laws, but that "normal routines for patient care have
been adjusted, particularly for those patients who have tested
positive." He said the facility is starting to see residents recover
from the virus, and that when someone is listed as recovered, they are
moved into a new wing of the nursing home -- apart from those residents
who are positive or negative.
He said that for the safety of staff,
and since many rooms do not have private showers, some residents are
given sponge baths two to three times per week.
"We
recognize this has been a difficult time for residents, their families,
and our staff," he said. "Our staff have endured much and are truly
heroic for their efforts to stay and care for their patients, even while
they are at risk for contracting the virus."
Other than the bits of information she
is able to glean from her caregivers, she said residents are not given
any detailed updates on Covid-19 cases, so she regularly checks the data
posted by the state to try to find out what is happening in her own
building.
Before
she was moved to isolation, and then to a different room, she was able
to listen for sirens, knowing that an ambulance would likely be called
if someone had died. But lately she said she has been too far away to
hear anything.
As of May 29, Bel
Tooren Villa Convalescent Hospital has reported 61 resident cases and 16
staff cases, according to the facility.
Twelve of Mayberry's fellow residents have died.
Full Article & Source:
Nursing home resident: 'I feel as though I am in #DeathCamp2020'
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