By Judith Graham
(Kaiser Health News)Where do we want to live in the years ahead? Older adults are asking this question anew in light of the ongoing toll of the coronavirus pandemic — disrupted lives, social isolation, mounting deaths. Many are changing their minds.
Some
people who planned to move to senior housing are now choosing to live
independently rather than communally. Others wonder whether transferring
to a setting where they can get more assistance might be the right
call.
These decisions,
hard enough during ordinary times, are now fraught with uncertainty as
the economy falters and Covid-19 deaths climb, including tens of
thousands in nursing homes and assisted living centers.
Teresa Ignacio Gonzalvo and her husband, Jaime, both 68, chose to build a
house rather than move into a continuing care retirement community when
they relocate from Virginia Beach, Virginia, to Indianapolis later this
year to be closer to their daughters.
Having heard about lockdowns around the
country because of the coronavirus, Gonzalvo said, "We've realized we're
not ready to lose our independence."
Alissa
Ballot, 64, is planning to leave her 750-square-foot apartment in
downtown Chicago and put down roots in a multigenerational cohousing
community where neighbors typically share dining and recreation areas
and often help one another.
Kim
Beckman, 64, and her husband, Mike, were ready to give up being
homeowners in Victoria, Texas, and join a 55-plus community or rent in
an independent living apartment building in northern Texas before
Covid-19 hit.
Now, they're
considering buying an even bigger home because "if you're going to be in
the house all the time, you might as well be comfortable," Beckman
said.
"Everyone I know is talking about this,"
said Wendl Kornfeld, 71, who lives on the Upper West Side of Manhattan.
She has temporarily tabled the prospect of moving into a continuing
care retirement community being built in the Bronx.
"My husband and I are going to play it by ear; we want to see how things play out" with the pandemic, she said.
In
Kornfeld's circles, people are more committed than ever to staying in
their homes or apartments as long as possible — at least at the moment.
Their fear: If they move to a senior living community, they might be
more likely to encounter a Covid-19 outbreak.
"All
of us have heard about the huge number of deaths in senior facilities,"
Kornfeld said. But people who stay in their own homes may have trouble
finding affordable help there when needed, she acknowledged.
Avoiding nursing homes amid the pandemic
More
than 70,000 residents and staff members in nursing homes and assisted
living facilities had died of Covid-19 by mid-August, according to the
latest count from the Kaiser Family Foundation.
This
is an undercount because less than half of states are reporting data
for Covid-19 in assisted living. Nor is data reported for people living
independently in senior housing. (Kaiser Health News is an editorially
independent program of the Kaiser Family Foundation.)
Nervousness about senior living has
spread as a result, and in July, the National Investment Center for
Seniors Housing & Care reported the lowest occupancy rates since the
research organization started tracking data 14 years ago.
Occupancy
dropped more in assisted living (a 3.2% decline from April through
June, compared with January through March) than in independent living (a
2.4% decline). The organization doesn't compile data on nursing homes.
In
a separate NIC survey of senior housing executives in August, 74% said
families had voiced concerns about moving in as Covid cases spiked in
many parts of the country.
Overcoming possible isolation
The
potential for social isolation is especially worrisome, as facilities
retain restrictions on family visits and on group dining and activities.
(While states have started to allow visits outside at nursing homes and
assisted living centers, most facilities don't yet allow visits inside —
a situation that will increase frustration when the weather turns
cold.)
Beth Burnham Mace, NIC's
chief economist and director of outreach, emphasized that operators have
responded aggressively by instituting new safety and sanitation
protocols, moving programming online, helping residents procure
groceries and other essential supplies, and communicating regularly
about Covid-19, both on-site and in the community at large, much more
regularly.
Mary Kazlusky, 76, resides in
independent living at Heron's Key, a continuing care retirement
community in Gig Harbor, Washington, which is doing all this and more
with a sister facility, Emerald Heights in Redmond, Washington.
"We
all feel safe here," she said. "Even though we're strongly advised not
to go into each other's apartments, at least we can see each other in
the hall and down in the lobby and down on the decks outside. As far as
isolation, you're isolating here with over 200 people: There's somebody
always around."
One staff member at
Heron's Key tested positive for Covid-19 in August but has recovered.
Twenty residents and staff members tested positive at Emerald Heights.
Two residents and one staff member died.
Colin
Milner, chief executive officer of the International Council on Active
Aging, stresses that some communities are doing a better job than
others. His organization recently published a report on the future of
senior living in light of the pandemic.
It
calls on operators to institute a host of changes, including
establishing safe visiting areas for families both inside and outside;
providing high-speed internet services throughout communities; and
ensuring adequate supplies of masks and other forms of personal
protective equipment for residents and staff, among other
recommendations.
Some families now
wish they'd arranged for older relatives to receive care in a more
structured environment before the pandemic started. They're finding that
older relatives living independently, especially those who are frail or
have mild cognitive impairments, are having difficulty managing on
their own.
"I'm hearing from a lot of people —
mostly older daughters — that we waited too long to move Mom or Dad, we
had our head in the sand, can you help us find a place for them," said
Allie Mazza, who owns Brandywine Concierge Senior Services in Kennett
Square, Pennsylvania.
While many
operators instituted move-in moratoriums early in the pandemic, most now
allow new residents as long as they test negative for Covid-19.
Quarantines of up to two weeks are also required before people can
circulate in the community.
Many
older adults, however, simply don't have the financial means to make a
move. More than half of middle-income seniors — nearly 8 million older
adults — can't afford independent living or assisted living communities,
according to a 2019 study.
And
more than 7 million seniors are poor, according to the federal
Supplemental Poverty Measure, which includes out-of-pocket medical
expenses and other drains on cash reserves.
Questions to ask
For those able to consider senior housing, experts suggest you ask several questions:
•
How is the facility communicating with residents and families? Has it
had a Covid outbreak? Is it disclosing Covid cases and deaths? Is it
sharing the latest guidance from federal, state and local public health
authorities?
• What protocols have
been instituted to ensure safety? "I'd want to know: Do they have a plan
in place for disasters — not just the pandemic but also floods, fires,
hurricanes, blizzards?" Milner said. "And beyond a plan, do they have
supplies in place?"
• How does the
community engage residents? Is online programming — exercise classes,
lectures, interest group meetings — available? Are one-on-one
interactions with staffers possible? Are staffers arranging online
interactions via FaceTime or Zoom with family? Are family visits
allowed?
"Social
engagement and stimulation are more important than ever," said David
Schless, president of the American Seniors Housing Association.
•
What's the company's financial status and occupancy rate? "Properties
with occupancy rates of 90% or higher are going to be able to withstand
the pressures of Covid-19 significantly more than properties with
occupancy below 80%, in my opinion," said Mace of the National
Investment Center for Seniors Housing & Care. Higher occupancy means
more revenues, which allows institutions to better afford extra
expenses associated with the pandemic.
"Transparency is very important," Schless said.
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