W. K. Lis
Superstar
Second wave of COVID strikes hard at Toronto’s previously unscathed Copernicus Lodge nursing home
From link.
Family of the 228 residents at Copernicus Lodge breathed a sigh of relief when the west-end Toronto long-term-care facility emerged from the first wave of the pandemic without a COVID-19 outbreak.
The not-for-profit, nursing home on Roncesvalles Avenue hasn’t been so fortunate this time around, and now an outbreak, declared Dec. 16, has left “essential caregivers” feeling shut out — at the very time when the facility, like many, is facing an acute staffing shortage.
“We want to come in as family members and help out. We’re prepared to wear PPE head to toe, take every precaution, wear masks, face shields, and stay inside the room. We would continue to be responsible,” said Monika Quinn on Saturday. Her mother and mother-in-law are both 94 and live at Copernicus.
As of Jan. 1, there had been 42 Copernicus residents who have tested positive for COVID-19, according to the home’s website. Six people have recovered and three died due to COVID-19, leaving a total of 33 active cases. In addition, there are 28 staff cases. Two have recovered and returned to work.
John Jarema, whose mother turns 93 Sunday, accepts he won’t be able to visit her to wish her a Happy Birthday. She has Alzheimer’s and is on one of those units with COVID-19 positive cases. He’s an essential caregiver.
“I will drop off a present at the front desk, sanitized, and hope it gets to her,” he said Saturday.
But he’s still upset he wasn’t allowed in before Christmas, even when her floor had no positive cases, and particularly after hearing about other long-term-care homes, “even in an outbreak, are allowing essential caregivers to still visit.”
Mary Oko hasn’t seen her mother inside Copernicus since mid-December. She and all the other residents have been required to stay in their rooms for weeks, without visitors and eating out of “styrofoam containers.”
The 228 residents, many from the Polish community, have been denied access to their loved ones since Dec. 20 due to the initial outbreak that only impacted nine residents, primarily in one living unit, she says.
She points to a provincial directive that says someone performing essential support services are the only type of visitors “allowed when a LTCH is in an outbreak.”
“But they’re still not letting us in,” Oko said. “And each week, the numbers are getting worse and why? Because the staff are exhausted,” and are stretched, possibly inadvertently spreading transmission, while trying to serve all the residents without the “valuable relief” provided by families, or volunteers.
Oko is also hearing, anecdotally, that other long-term care homes are allowing in essential caregivers.
“My question to Toronto Public Health is we’re in the same city, why are the policies different?”
Dr. Elizabeth Rea, associate medical officer of health, Toronto Public Health, wrote in email to the Star that the provincial directive does allow for “specific direction to halt visitors during outbreaks at the discretion of local public health. We aim to continue allowing essential visitors as they are a critical support the well-being of residents.”
While a confirmed COVID outbreak has been declared on multiple floors at Copernicus, “a decision was made to temporarily pause outside visitors ... to allow staff to quickly focus on putting outbreak measures and additional precautions in place to reduce virus spread and to protect staff and residents in this home.”
That appears to be working, she wrote.
“We are cautiously optimistic that this outbreak is stabilizing.” She noted the management team, which includes Copernicus, TPH, and Unity Health, began opening up several units to essential visitors over the weekend.
“As additional test results come in over the next few days we hope to expand visits safely to all units, and also extend the length of visits.”