From Disability Scoop:
“Hospital No-Visitor Policies
Endanger People With Disabilities, Advocates Say”
Disability advocates are alarmed
that no-visitor policies are forcing people with developmental disabilities —
including those who are nonverbal — to go it alone at hospitals across the
nation. Hospitals are sharply limiting access to their facilities in an effort
to slow the spread of COVID-19. And in many cases, there are no policies in
place to ensure an exception for individuals with disabilities who require
assistance. “We are aware of only seven states or state hospital associations
that have issued statewide guidance or policies that explicitly make clear that
people with disabilities have the right to be accompanied by a disability
support person if that is necessary for them to communicate effectively or to
otherwise ensure they are able to adequately access and benefit from the
medical treatment that is offered to patients without underlying/preexisting
disabilities,” said Tauna Szymanski, executive director and legal director at
CommunicationFIRST, a national advocacy group focused on communication
disabilities.
Szymanski’s group along with
Disability Rights Connecticut, the Center for Public Representation and The Arc
filed a complaint this week with the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services’ Office for Civil Rights alleging that recent guidance from the state
of Connecticut violates the Americans with Disabilities Act and other laws. The
recently-issued state guidance said that a support person should be allowed to
accompany people with intellectual and developmental disabilities who receive
services from the state’s Department of Developmental Services, but did not
extend the same accommodation to others with similar needs who are not
supported by the state agency. The complaint details the experience of Shane
Sessa, 48, who has intellectual disability, cerebral palsy and communication
challenges. His mother, who is his legal guardian, was not permitted to
accompany him during a three-week hospitalization in April leading Sessa to be
confused and afraid and “almost combative,” the complaint said. He remains
“upset and shaken” and now makes ambulance sounds to show that he is worried
about being taken back to the hospital. The Connecticut complaint is the first
to be filed with HHS’ Office for Civil Rights since the coronavirus pandemic
began related to hospital visitor policies, advocates said. It is one of
several efforts underway to ensure accommodations for those with disabilities who
require hospitalization for COVID-19 or otherwise.
The American Academy of
Developmental Medicine & Dentistry, which represents physicians and other
health professionals who treat people with intellectual and developmental
disabilities, has warned that barring support people for individuals in this
population could lead to detrimental outcomes and is pushing all states to
implement visitation policies that allow for a support person. An online
petition the medical group spearheaded has more than 37,000 signatures. “Regrettably,
the ‘No Visitors’ policies may result in deleterious and sub-optimal clinical
outcomes because vital bio-psycho-social information is not available to
medical staff. Agency personnel and family caregivers who have this type of
information can provide it stat when on site in the patient’s room or floor,”
reads a policy statement from the group. “Such designated support personnel are
not passive ‘visitors,’ they can provide vital information that can impact
clinical decisions and outcomes.” Meanwhile, the Consortium for Citizens with
Disabilities, a coalition representing dozens of disability advocacy groups,
has crafted letters signed by more than 100 local and national groups that
advocates across the country can use to lobby their governors and hospital
administrators. “In light of the accommodations health providers are already
making for classes of patients such as minors, people in labor and people at
the end of life, making an additional limited exception to the visitor policy
for individuals with disabilities would be a reasonable modification,” state
the letters, which cite New York, Oregon and Illinois as examples of states
that have already issued guidance allowing for such accommodations. Additionally,
the National Down Syndrome Society has put together a document advising
families on what to do if a hospital is denying visitors for a patient with the
chromosomal disorder.
^ There needs to be an allowance
made at hospitals. Nursing homes, group homes, hospice, etc. for end-of-life
situations and certain other situations like someone non-verbal, etc. This is
not the first pandemic the US or the world has experienced – just the first in
about 100 years – and while in the past no one cared about what happened to the
disabled we have to show we are more evolved in our treatment and thinking. ^
https://www.disabilityscoop.com/2020/05/08/hospital-no-visitor-policies-endanger-disabilities-advocates/28300/
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