NACOGDOCHES,
Texas (KTRE) - The president and CEO of the Texas Health Care
Association says the industry is striving to get back on track with open
visitation between long term care facility residents and families. The
effort comes too late for some.
Nacogdoches
resident Betty Ann Taylor says her mother entered a long-term care
facility for rehabilitation after a fall. Betty Ann’s mother never came
out alive. She died from COVID-19, alone.
Taylor's
grief and anger over how she lost her mother to COVID-19 is too painful
for her to talk about publicly, but like so many families the
separation was heartbreaking and painful.
"Our focus literally over the past couple of months has been on the issue of visitation."
Warren
spoke Tuesday before Nacogdoches Chamber stakeholders. He said
visitation between long-term care residents and families must get back
on track.
Plans
were in the process to offer visitation at COVID-19 free facilities and
then progressing to those with cases. Then another COVID-19 spike
occurred.
“That has, if you will, pushed pause on the visitation process,” said Warren.
Too
late for Taylor and the mother she cared for most each and everyday.
Too late for Representative Travis Clardy, whose father-in-law recently
passed-away during long-term care.
Clardy offered this suggestion in-behalf of his wife, Judy.
“If
there was a way for families to designate even just one person of the
family, so not an open visitation. And it could be a caregiver. It
doesn’t have to be a family member,” said Clardy.
The
opportunity is challenged by the silent transmission of COVID-19. Added
safeguards are in place, but they will never be 100% effective.
Betty Ann Taylor writes ‘My mother didn’t need to die of COVID-19’.
Full Article & Source:
Efforts to reopen longterm care visitation too late for some in Nacogdoches
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