Readers share how they are coping

Readers share how they are coping

Source: The Record
By Marnie McAllister
April 16, 2020

Click here to view article

Heeding the call of Gov. Andy Beshear and Archbishop Joseph E. Kurtz Kentuckians are, for the most part, doing their civic and moral duty to stay at home during the COVID-19 pandemic.

But how do we do that healthfully, when we are deprived of the things that nourish our hearts? Family parties, Mass, sporting events — they’re all out of reach.

Fortunately, we’re an Easter people — we believe in the resurrection and the promise of new life. That sense of hope is guiding Catholics around the Archdiocese of Louisville through the pandemic.

More than 50 people shared with The Record’s readers how they’re coping, particularly where they find hope. Mary Holder and her husband are dealing directly with the virus. An Assumption senior says she’s found reasons to stay positive. Ursuline Sister Mary Lee Hansen asks us to consider, “What has my hand done for others during this pandemic?”

Read their stories and those of others from around the archdiocese — the voices of children, clergy, religious and parents. Each tells a story of hope and compassion.

Abbie Trowbridge, director of Mission & Pastoral Care, Nazareth Home Clifton
As the Director of Mission and Pastoral Care at Nazareth Home Clifton, the largest part of my job is to support and enhance the spiritual health and wellbeing of our elders, their families and our staff members. All three populations are currently facing unique challenges.

Staff are facing many new challenges at home from making ends meet to finding safe and reliable childcare. There are many added distractions and worries on their minds. The administrative team, along with many outside supporters, have come together to offer encouragement and support from every direction — from delicious catered lunches to beautiful homemade masks.

It is also been a challenging time for our families, but they have been understanding and (most importantly) have followed all of the safety guidelines that we have put in place to keep our elders safe and healthy. Visits with family and friends are a huge part of one’s spiritual wellbeing and so understandably this has been a huge concern for us. We have been orchestrating meet-ups through closed windows and on FaceTime, family reunions with Zoom and we’ve arranged calls from other countries through WhatsApp. This complex ballet of virtual pastoral care has been a labor of love for our entire staff.

But the most striking thing for me has been the strength and resilience of our elders in the face of this pandemic. I am constantly amazed at how they take this all in their stride, lacking any self-pity or upset. I look forward with hope to the day that our elders can worship together again.

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Director of Activities Karen Kramer recognized for bringing joy to others

Director of Activities Karen Kramer recognized for bringing joy to others

Karen Kramer, Director of Activities at Nazareth Home Clifton, has been selected as one of WLKY and Commonwealth Credit Union’s Community Spotlight winners! The recognition celebrates people who are making a difference in our community. 

Abbie Trowbridge, Nazareth Home Clifton’s Director of Mission & Pastoral Care, nominated Karen. Here is what she wrote in her nomination.

“When the pandemic struck, and the elders had to be isolated in their rooms, Karen immediately jumped in, providing fun, stimulating and engaging activities. These activities allow the elders to stay connected to one another and their families at home. Whether she’s bringing around special treats like doughnuts and Comfy Cow ice cream, organizing a St. Patrick’s Day Parade (made up of staff) or orchestrating bingo from the safety of their rooms, Karen hasn’t let up once. Despite the fear and uncertainty that pervades our days in long-term care, Karen has been a shining example to our staff of how to keep going in the face of adversity – in this case, COVID-19. Karen has faithfully served at this location for almost 40 years and deserved recognition before now, but recognition isn’t why she does this every day. Karen does this because she cares about our elders and our mission of compassion and hospitality. Right now it is hard to come into our building every day and get back to work with so much anxiety around the elders’ health and the health of our families, but Karen doesn’t stop, and it inspires us to get to work and to work hard each day. At this time, so much emphasis is put on our heroic nurses, doctors and aides, but what Karen does is equally important to the health and wellbeing of the elders. I want to recognize her and the integral part she plays. I feel so lucky to work side-by-side with Karen. She brings so much joy to so many people, and isn’t joy what we need right now?”

Congratulations, Karen! We are proud to have you as part of the Nazareth Home family!

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Finding joy through the chaos

COVID-19 has created a new normal for all of us, especially within the Nazareth Home community. For well over a month, we have been practicing social distancing and not allowing visitors to our campuses. While we find ourselves in less than perfect circumstances, the goodness of humans and their sweet spirits have poured out, giving us joy even through this chaos. 

Countless family members, neighbors, local businesses and volunteers have found creative and fun ways to warm the hearts of residents and staff. Here are just a few examples that we hope warm your heart, too!

Many family members have decorated the elder’s windows, posted items outside their window and brought signs of hope and love while they waved to their loved ones through the glass.

Donuts, coffee, lunch and snacks were sent to the staff and elders from family members, business partners and other local businesses,thanking the staff for their work and lifting the spirits of the elders.

Businesses like Home Instead Senior Care
sent the staff
COVID Coping Kits.

A staff member picked up Comfy Cow, a local ice cream parlor and a favorite of the elders, and brought yummy treats to the elders and staff at Nazareth Home Clifton.

 

Many cards of gratitude and encouragement have been received!

The staff has participated in Crazy Hair Day, and other fun spirit week activities to bring joy and smiles to all at Nazareth Home.

We are so grateful for all the love and support in our community!

Oscar Wilde once said, “The smallest act of kindness is worth more than the grandest intention.” This could not be more true in this time of uncertainty. 

In this world, doing good is always welcomed. Let’s work together to be Healthy at Home while spreading our love and goodness to others.

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COVID-19 Update: A letter from Nazareth Home President and CEO Mary Haynes

COVID-19 Update: A letter from Nazareth Home President and CEO Mary Haynes

To all our family, friends and neighbors:

The past two weeks have been filled with news, guidance and change. I want to speak with you about how Nazareth Home has met the challenges of new information and separations that have come with our required responses to the COVID-19 pandemic.

On Monday, March 9, 2020, we began what is now a series of actions aimed at the confinement of this novel COVID-19 virus. Each of these changes became more restrictive as the week progressed with the involvement of the Kentucky Health Department, Centers for Medicaid and Medicare, the Centers for Disease Control, the President of the United States and the task force put in place by our Governor Andy Beshear. We are grateful for the many ways we have been receiving information and the guidance and some rules we have been given in keeping our environment safe and secure. We are in a state of containment. The restriction of family is, of course, the most difficult of all. 

At this point, no staff member, elder or anyone involved with Nazareth Home, either campus, is sick with COVID-19. Please know that if anyone is affected by the virus, we will make notification and likely, our processes for staying safe may change.

Also, know that the leadership team of both campuses are very capable in a time of crisis. We have a compliance officer, Sandra King, who has thirty years as a nursing faculty and long term care leader. Two years ago, we identified a position called infection control preventionist. This person, Stephanie Nicholson, is a nurse practitioner. Her work, research and education have been of tremendous support and benefit to the leadership teams. Our nurse administrators are exceptional, as our survey histories demonstrate. Our other administrators and leaders are very equipped to manage this crisis, and I want to tell you, we have been on-site every day since Monday, March 9.  Beginning this weekend, we will have an administrator on duty on Saturdays and a nurse administrator on duty on Sundays to help with questions and concerns and to help with the increased communication needs. This practice is now scheduled through April 25.  

While you may be hearing or fearing a disturbance in the supply chain, we have no concerns about our food supply. It is secure, and we have no reason to believe that will change. The medical supplies, as you have heard, are a concern. Right now, we are secure in what we have to meet our current needs, but we do have a plan in place to moderate our use based on changes in the community or changes under our roof.

We have a very solid disaster plan that was approved during our Medicare survey at the end of last year.

Here are the major changes the response to the crisis have caused us to institute:

    • Absolute restriction of family and any other potential visitors. 
    • The screening of all staff for symptoms, exposure and travel.
    • Daily temperatures are taken, for staff at the beginning of each shift and daily for elders/residents.
    • Re-education in infection control, cleaning methods, hand hygiene and the importance of social distancing. 
    • Ceasing of communal Mass. Mass is televised, and the Eucharist distributed by our staff who have been educated and screened to do so.
    • Activity programs modified to observe social distancing.
    • Meal service changed to remove common dining.
    • No gatherings.
    • Stopped outpatient therapy services.
    • Limiting medical practitioners to essential visits only and asking personal care residents not to go out.
    • No home visits of our therapy staff or pre-discharge from our short stay therapy area.

Other things we are doing:

    • Daily monitoring of all the educational sites to learn what we should be doing.
    • Daily huddle of leadership to monitor the effectiveness of our policies and practices.
    • Continuing to admit patients and residents following best practice methods.
    • Trying to have fun, special treats and music to lift our spirits.
    • Stepped up communication, asking team members to help residents keep in touch with family via FaceTime, Facebook and Skype.
    • Using our in house Facebook private account to push out communication, educational videos and news.

We are relying on our values to lead us through this time. We are finding inspiration in the family conversations, the perspectives of the elders who have been through wars and rations, and as always the amazing efforts by the staff who are committed to Nazareth Home.

We appreciate your confidence and what must seem like a great amount of trust right now. Please know we hold ourselves to our commitments. Contact me at mhaynes@nazhome.org, and you will receive a prompt response from me or a member of the leadership group.

Our goal is to navigate through this time in a way that we end stronger in relationship with you and with each other. Be safe and stay well.

Mary N Haynes
President

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COVID-19 Update: The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) has restricted ALL skilled nursing visitors except in end of life situations

COVID-19 Update: The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) has restricted ALL skilled nursing visitors except in end of life situations

With a national emergency now declared, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) has restricted ALL skilled nursing visitors except in end of life situations.

Based on the guidance as a result of the emergency declared yesterday, we will amend some of the practices we began earlier in the week.  

Any normal visiting practices are suspended until the emergency is declared ceased. We will also implement some internal changes and possible restrictions of gatherings under our roof. 

We know these interruptions and restrictions are very hard.  

Please know we have no reason to suspect anyone here has COVID-19 and if a case were to be developed, we would notify the family.

Please contact the nursing station or social worker for more information and for arranging telephone, video and Facebook chats.

Please continue to reach out to us and follow our webpage, www.nazhome.org for more information.

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Some Kentucky nursing homes are limiting visitors amid reports of first coronavirus cases

Some Kentucky nursing homes are limiting visitors amid reports of first coronavirus cases

Source: Louisville Courier Journal
March 10, 2020

Click here to view article

Nursing homes around Kentucky have been on high alert for the new coronavirus, after reports last month from Washington state about an outbreak at a skilled care facility that killed more than a dozen residents and sickened others.

But when Gov. Andy Beshear on Friday announced Kentucky’s first COVID-19 case in Harrison County, some took the extra step of restricting visitors, said Betsy Johnson, president of the state Association of Health Care Facilities.

“There’s definitely a significant level of concern,” said Johnson, who’s in regular touch with nursing home administrators statewide with information and updates. “I don’t think anyone’s in a panic situation; they just want to know what the protocol is.”

Older people are considered more vulnerable to the virus, especially if they have other health problems, as do most residents of nursing homes.

Concern increased Sunday when Beshear announced the number of cases in Kentucky had grown to four, and again on Monday evening when the governor said two more cases were confirmed. The cases are reported in Harrison, Fayette and Jefferson counties.

Kentucky has about 300 nursing homes statewide with a capacity for 27,000 residents. Facilities in Harrison and Fayette counties are among those restricting visitors, Johnson said.

Some Louisville facilities also have stopped outside visitors.

Nazareth Home, which operates two nursing facilities in Louisville, one in the Highlands and the other in Clifton, announced a temporary end to visitors Monday, said CEO Mary Haynes.

“It’s a shame to have to restrict visitors,” Haynes said, but added “it’s a strong proactive step” to protect the about 270 residents on the two Nazareth campuses.

Letters went out Monday to friends, families and others asking them not to visit for now, and staff informed the residents.

Haynes said most people seem understanding but, “it’s a challenge to all of us is not knowing how long we’ll be limiting our exposure to others.”

For now, she said, residents will rely on Skype, FaceTime and other electronic means of communicating with friends and family outside Nazareth Home.

“We have a lot of iPads and notebooks,” Haynes said. “We’re encouraging a lot of Skype and Facebook Live. “We’ll see how it all plays out.”

Nazareth also is carefully screening all employees or anyone else who enters the buildings, including Roman Catholic priests who celebrate daily Mass at Nazareth.

So far, no employees have been restricted for reasons such as a fever or travel to the site of an outbreak, but one priest has been asked to remain away for 14 days because he had recently traveled to another country with an outbreak of the coronavirus, Haynes said.

Meanwhile, other organizations are working to get the word out to older adults about how to protect themselves and what to do if they suspect they or someone around them may have contracted the illness.

AARP has a national call-in town hall scheduled at 1 p.m. Tuesday featuring federal health officials to discuss the coronavirus outbreak and answer questions. Called “Coronavirus and You,” it is open to the public and people may register in advance through the AARP website or by calling 1-877-207-4934.

AARP also has an online blog on its website with information including how to reduce the risk of contracting COVID-19, how to prepare for a prolonged stay at home (make sure you have enough food and medicine) and whether to cancel vacations plans.

One tip: if you are planning an out-of-town trip, think about how you might feel should the coronavirus be detected at your hotel and you wind up quarantined for 14 days, the AARP site suggests.

And it links to advice from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for basic advice such as avoiding crowds, washing hands frequently and staying home when you are sick.

“We know that people are concerned, and we are trying to put information in our members’ hands through all of our channels,” said Scott Wegenast, communications director for AARP of Kentucky. “This is part of our mission, and it’s important that folks pay attention to what the experts are saying.”

AARP also has information on its Facebook page and Twitter account, @AARPKY.

The CDC, on its website, urges community groups, families and neighbors to check on older adults who may live alone. That also includes making sure they have enough food, medicine and other supplies they may need, such as oxygen.

Neighbors can play an important role in helping look out for older or disabled individuals, said Drew Hight, with Elderserve, a non-profit agency that provides services to older residents in the area, including help at home with cooking, cleaning and personal care.

“Check in on your neighbors,” he said. “That’s where we get a lot of our referrals. Neighbors notice someone’s not outside, and they aren’t seeing them as often.”

In Kentucky, other resources include the Department for Public Health’s COVID-19 Hotline: 1-800-722-5725.

The state also has information on the website kycovid19.ky.gov.

Reach Deborah Yetter at dyetter@courier-journal.com or 502-582-4228. Find her on Twitter at @d_yetter. Support strong local journalism by subscribing today: courier-journal.com/subscribe

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Nazareth Home is taking precautionary measures and restricting visitors due to the Coronavirus disease (COVID-19).

Nazareth Home is taking precautionary measures and restricting visitors from visiting due to the Coronavirus disease (COVID-19)

Nazareth Home is taking precautionary measures and restricting visitors from visiting both campuses due to the Coronavirus disease (COVID-19). This decision follows guidance from the Kentucky Public Health Department and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). While our immediate risk of exposure is low, our number one priority is the health and safety of our elders, patients, and staff. We are taking a proactive response, and our main focus is prevention.

There is now a confirmed case in Jefferson County, causing the health department to act. The visitor restriction is strictly a precaution aimed at proactively limiting the risk of exposure. We have no reported exposures or cases at Nazareth Home.

We are following all guidance from both the CDC and the health department on prevention steps, screenings and all other practices identified. For the latest information and prevention updates, visit the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention website.

If you are a family member of an elder living at Nazareth Home, a social worker will be reaching out to answer any questions or concerns you may have. At this time, it is unknown as to how long the Kentucky Public Health Department will advise us to restrict visitors.

Thank you for your patience and understanding. For questions, please contact our administrator at 502-479-2526.

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What to expect when moving to Nazareth Home from your home

What to expect when moving to Nazareth Home from your home

Nazareth Home strives to make the move from home to long-term care as simple as possible. It’s not an easy decision for anyone, but with the right preparation, you can make the transition less hectic for your loved one. If you know what to expect, it will be a much smoother process.

All long-term care homes are not the same. Finding the right one is a huge factor in helping loved ones adjust. Make sure to do your research, tour prospective facilities and talk to staff and administrators about everything from what elders can bring with them to the types of meals offered and activities available.

At Nazareth Home, we aim to make every elder feel at home. Schedule a tour and see how our compassionate, nurturing and person-centered care will allow your loved one to live their best life.

For questions or to discuss options for your loved one, contact Sharon or Jeanine.

Sharon Weikert
Director of Admissions
502-473-2398
sweikert@nazhome.org

Jeanine Pernosky
Director of Admissions
502-357-5571
jpernosky@nazhome.org

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