From USA Today:
“People with disabilities are
afraid they will be denied health care because of coronavirus”
Margaret Breihan relies on the
nursing assistants who visit six mornings a week to help her shower, dress and
tidy up her Silver Spring, Maryland, apartment. Breihan, 31, who has cerebral palsy, is mostly
self-reliant and does everything from shop to cook from her electric wheelchair
but she has limited mobility and struggles with daily tasks like pulling
clothes out of a dryer or showering. Sheltering
in her apartment for the past two weeks amid the coronavirus outbreak, she
lives in daily dread of one day finding out the help can no longer visit. One
of her helpers lives with a daughter who is a nurse at a local hospital,
deepening her concern for infection. "I
keep waiting every morning for the phone call that the agency is withdrawing
its assistance," said Breihan, who is pursing a master's degree in social
work at Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C. "It hasn't
happened, thank God. But it's a scary prospect, I won't lie." People with
disabilities and chronic health conditions are some of the most vulnerable
groups during the coronavirus crisis, though often overlooked in the national
debate, according to advocates. The virus has infected more than 69,000
Americans and led to nearly more than 1,000 U.S. deaths, according to a site
run by Johns Hopkins University.
On Wednesday, 27 U.S.
representatives and five senators sent a letter to the Department of Health and
Human Services, or HHS, and U.S. Attorney General William Barr, urging them to
issue guidance to state agencies to protect people with disabilities from being
discriminated against during the outbreak. U.S. Rep. Chris Smith, R-NJ, led the
effort. A $2 trillion relief bill passed by the Senate earmarks some relief for
those with disabilities, such as $85 million for centers for assisted living,
but has a long way to go to protect the most vulnerable, U.S. Bob Casey, D-PA,
said. "If you have a disability,
your daily life is often a series of struggles to begin with," said Casey,
who has advocated for more assistance for the elderly and people with
disabilities during the outbreak. "Those challenges that they face are now
that much greater. We have to try to be responsive to that."
One of the concerns is whether
people with disabilities will be sidelined for healthcare as medical equipment
such as ventilators and hospital beds become increasingly scarce, said Ari
Ne'eman, visiting scholar at the Lurie Institute for Disability Policy at
Brandeis University in Massachusetts. A number of states, including Utah,
Tennessee and Alabama, have emergency contingency plans that direct hospitals
not to provide medical equipment, such as ventilators, to people with certain
intellectual and cognitive disabilities, should that equipment become scarce,
he said. On Tuesday, several groups,
including the Center for Public Representation and the Alabama Disabilities
Advocacy Program, filed a complaint with HHS's Office of Civil Rights, alleging
the Alabama Department of Public Health’s Emergency Operations Plan violates
federal disability rights law, including the Americans with Disabilities Act
(ADA), according to the complaint. "There
are very severe concerns that disabled people are going to be sent to the back
of the line when accessing healthcare equipment such as ventilators,"
Ne'eman said. Signed into law 30 years
ago this July by former president George H.W. Bush, the ADA is the signature
civil rights law for people of disabilities, prohibiting discrimination in all
areas of public life, including jobs, schools and transportation. As hospitals and the federal government reach
crisis levels because of the pandemic, advocates are closely watching to see
whether the ADA is adhered to, Ne'eman said. "What we’re really going to see
determined here is whether this country really meant it when they passed the
ADA 30 years ago, that they passed it as a civil right and not as an act of
charity," he said. "You can do away with charity when times are
tough. You cannot do away with civil rights." The National Disability
Institute hosted two webinars this week to explain developments and field
questions regarding disabilities and the coronavirus. The online sessions drew
more than 1,500 attendees. One of the
voiced concerns was that health care providers were not going to be able to
continue making home visits as the outbreak deepened, said Michael Morris, the
institute's founder and senior strategic adviser. With no home care, states
could turn to grouping those with severe disabilities in state-run facilities
-- a trend advocates have worked hard to reverse over the past three decades,
he said.
There's also fear that hospitals
will classify people with disabilities and chronic illnesses as a lower
priority for healthcare -- a fear Morris said he's experienced firsthand. As a
person battling cancer, Morris had been going to a Washington-area hospital
once a month for chemotherapy and had investigative surgery every three months,
he said. The hospital recently told him they're suspending his treatment to
redirect doctors and space to coronavirus victims. "This story is playing out by the
thousands across the country," Morris said. "People with disabilities
and chronic health conditions are incredibly afraid of the rationing of
healthcare." As the pandemic took hold in the U.S., Breihan began
prepping. Her classes at Catholic University went online so she was able to
continue with those. Her mother brought her cash and friends volunteered to
deliver groceries. In case her helpers stop coming, she bought a
"reacher-grabber" through Amazon.com that allows her to pull laundry
out of the dryer. She plans to struggle through sponge baths. Breihan's greater concern is what happens if
she gets infected. Drive-through testing sites won't help her or thousands like
her, she said, since she doesn't drive. If some day she needs emergency
healthcare, she hopes she doesn't wind up low on the list of priorities. "I
do my best to contribute to our society," Breihan said. "Just because
I live a life that might be different from yours, doesn’t mean my life isn't
valuable and worth saving and worth protecting."
^ This goes along with the
earlier elderly article. The disabled deserve the same level of care that
everyone else receives. I understand that things are chaotic right now, but
that does not lessen someone’s worth. The Nazis murdered and sterilized thousands
of disabled people. That was a crime against humanity. I do not want to see the
US sink to that level. We are the greatest country in the world and that means
that every one of our citizens and nationals (regardless of their age or
ability) are also the best. ^
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2020/03/26/coronavirus-crisis-people-with-disabilities-discriminate/5082197002/
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