From Yahoo/NYT:
“To Keep Their Son Alive, They
Sleep in Shifts. And Hope a Nurse Shows Up.”
(Chloe Mead and Andy Maskin tend
to their seven-year-old son, Henry, who lives with a rare condition called
spinal muscular atrophy that requires 24-hour medical care, at their home in
Queens on May 9, 2021.)
It was 9 a.m. on a Sunday in May,
and Chloe Mead was already worn out. In her living room, she cradled her
7-year-old son, Henry, supporting his head with one hand and helping him toss a
ball with the other, careful not to disturb the ventilator that was keeping him
alive. A nearby monitor tracked his blood-oxygen levels and a pump was at the
ready should his tracheotomy tube need cleaning. In the corner, her 4-year-old
daughter was building a pillow fort. “I need, like, five extra arms,” she said.
Ordinarily, she wouldn’t be by herself. Since infancy, Henry, who has spinal
muscular atrophy, a rare muscle-wasting disorder, has had intensive,
round-the-clock nursing at home, with Mead and her husband serving as fallbacks
when a nurse unexpectedly cancels a shift.
But the recent shortage of home-care nurses has forced the couple, who
live in Queens, New York, to handle longer and longer periods on their own — as
many as 36 hours at a stretch. That morning, her husband, Andy Maskin, was
catching up on sleep so he could take that night’s late shift, from 2 a.m.
until 7 a.m., when he begins his own workweek.
About 4.5 million Americans with
illnesses and disabilities are cared for at home by aides, therapists or
nurses. Most of these patients are older, but hundreds of thousands are
children with complex health needs, a number that has climbed upward as medical
advances allow more to survive into adulthood. The families of these children
have long struggled to find skilled help, but many say COVID-19 has made an
already untenable situation even worse. Nurses left the workforce to care for
their own out-of-school children, or abandoned the profession permanently. And
the surging demand for personnel at hospitals, testing sites and vaccination
centers drew nurses away with as much as double the wages they earn caring for
patients at home. The easing of the pandemic may not improve conditions much.
The shortage of nurses is long-standing and in the wake of a public health crisis
that prompted 29% of health care workers to consider leaving the profession,
many expect a wave of retirements. “This is as bad as it’s ever been,” said Liz
Wise, who works for the nationwide nonprofit Bayada Home Health Care, helping
transition young patients from hospitals to homes. Her own daughter needed
home-care nursing, so she feels it keenly when patients can’t get the coverage
they need. “Disappointing families is enough to keep me up at night.” Many had
pinned their hopes on the Biden administration’s infrastructure plan, which
would provide $400 billion to improve home and community-based care. But as the
president and Republicans vie over the proposal’s size and scope, it’s unclear
whether that part will survive.Parents, meanwhile, continue to shoulder an
unrelenting burden, increasingly alone.
The Pandemic Deepens a Pay Gap
A nurse caring for a medically fragile child at home has the same
responsibilities he or she would in a hospital but no medical backup in case of
emergency. It’s a high-wire act, and experts say that prevailing wages don’t
reflect its difficulty. Federal guidelines permit state Medicaid
programs to cover in-home care for eligible children regardless of their
families’ income, since the price of round-the-clock nursing would bankrupt
almost anyone. But states generally pay home care nurses at much lower rates
than they would for equivalent care in a hospital or other medical center. “They
effectively establish a benchmark of workers’ compensation that competitively
disadvantages this field,” said Roger Noyes, a spokesman for the Home Care
Association of New York State. In turn, state-certified home health agencies
that provide families with nurses pay meager salaries and seldom offer health
insurance or other benefits to the nurses they employ. So, although home care
is more appropriate for medically fragile children, hospitals receive about
half of Medicaid spending on these cases compared further diminished the home care workforce.
Surging with the pandemic, the state’s largest health care provider, Northwell
Health, hired 40% more nurses in 2020 than the year prior and contracted with
1,000 additional temporary nurses once the local hiring pool was exhausted.
Robert Pacella, the CEO of Caring
Hands Home Care, the agency that staffs Henry’s case, noticed the change in
January as nurses began declining opportunities to pick up shifts and new
applicants dwindled. “As recently as two years ago, we could easily interview
20 people a week who were qualified — now we’re lucky to get two to four,” he
said. For the first time in his career, Pacella said, he had to turn new
patients away. The problem isn’t confined to New York. Thrive Skilled Pediatric
Care says its eight-state operation received 53% fewer job applicants in March
compared with the same month last year. Shortages of home care providers have
been recently reported from New Hampshire to Michigan to Pennsylvania.Jarred
Rhatigan, a 31-year-old nurse from Nassau County, was once part of the home
care : In addition to a full-time
position in a hospital, he worked several days a week with Caring Hands for an
hourly wage of around $40. But beginning last December, he dropped all those
shifts to administer vaccines at sites across the greater New York area for up
to $75 an hour. “Home care definitely can’t compete with the rates,” he said.
These earnings helped him pay off $8,000 of student loans this year, although
it’s just a dent in the $62,000 he still owes. For the last four years, Jen
Semple, a registered nurse in South Carolina, has provided home care to a
single patient, despite hourly pay that rose just $1 during that time. When the
pandemic began, she cut her home care hours to administer vaccines for a local
health care system, at an hourly wage $7 higher than she had been earning. It
is rewarding to contribute to the COVID recovery, she said, and the atmosphere
is cheerful, with a stream of patients thrilled to get their doses. “But part
of me does feel guilty because I know my private duty patient still has hours
unfilled,” she said. Between June and October 2020, Carolyn Foster, a
researcher and pediatrician at the Ann and Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital
of Chicago, surveyed parents of medically fragile children and found that half
had lost home health care services during the pandemic. And patients with the
most complex conditions often have the hardest time finding capable staff. “The
most vulnerable families were made all that more vulnerable,” she said.
‘We Have Nobody’ In the
first months of the pandemic, two of Henry’s nurses fell ill and quarantined,
and his parents cut back hours at their own jobs to take up the slack. After
several months, they reassembled their nursing coverage, but by this spring,
gaps reappeared. Mead said that when she called her home care agency, they
responded, “We have nobody.” Mead reached out to other agencies,
contacted nurses who had formerly cared for Henry, and posted a plea on
Facebook. To make matters worse, her daughter had recently been diagnosed with
Type 1 diabetes, so the couple now had to look after two children with
life-threatening conditions. The recurrent all-nighters have stretched
both parents thin. “I would like to believe that I’m always going to be 100%
sharp, but what if I’m so exhausted that I make a mistake with something?” Mead
asked. “It’s really frightening.” For single parents, the difficulties
are compounded. Sarin Morris, a 40-year-old mother in Clifton, New Jersey, has
sole responsibility for her 4-year-old, Sam, whose rare neurological disorder
has left him on a ventilator and prone to seizures. He is prescribed 20 hours a
day of nursing care but has never had nurses to cover it all. Morris and
Sam’s father divorced before he was born and her parents live in Italy, so she
has no family to assist her. If she can get a nurse, she works at Home Depot.
Early in the pandemic she switched to the night shift, restocking shelves while
the store is empty to reduce the risk she will contract the coronavirus and
pass it on to her son. “But if I don’t have coverage, I can’t go to work,” she
said. “And if I can’t go to work, I can’t have my bills paid on time.” Weekends
are the worst, she says. She has struggled to get any nursing coverage at all,
and from Saturday night to Monday morning she is alone with her son, sometimes
lying in bed beside him so his seizures will wake her if she dozes off. When a
nurse finally relieves her, she rests a few hours before heading to work. “It’s
a nightmare,” she said. “I don’t remember the last time I got a full night’s
sleep in my bed.” Out of desperation, Morris has considered enrolling in
nursing school, in hopes of earning a living at her son’s bedside. State
Medicaid programs typically bar people from getting paid as caregivers for relatives,
but some of those restrictions were temporarily relaxed during the pandemic,
and a few states have established permanent programs. In Colorado, for example,
people can become paid certified nursing assistants for family members. But
Morris is daunted by the tuition for the two-year nursing program at a nearby
university, over $25,000. Her current job pays $13 an hour, and she has no
savings.
Government Steps In, Lightly To
address the deficit of nurses, experts tick off recommendations including
better incorporating home care into nursing education and creating financial
incentives to enter the field — but most agree the problem can’t be truly
addressed without narrowing the disparate pay between home care and medical
facilities. “Reimbursement rates need to be increased for home care, and
also include health benefit packages, so that it becomes more of a valued
health care role,” said Cara Coleman, the director of public policy and
advocacy at Family Voices, a nonprofit that advocates for families and children
with special needs. Until recently, New York state’s Medicaid program
paid less than most other states for registered nurses who care for medically
fragile children. Last October, after years of advocacy by families and medical
providers, the state carried out the first of several planned increases in
reimbursement, and by April 2022 they will have risen by 45%. “We were
blown away they did it,” said Dr. Eddie Simpser, the president of St. Mary’s
Healthcare System for Children, who pushed for the increase. But, he said,
“hospital salaries are still strong competition.”
Since Medicaid programs receive
significant federal funding, many advocates are looking to Washington for help.
As part of the stimulus package, enacted in March, the Biden administration
temporarily increased federal support for state Medicaid programs’ home and
community-based services — but the measure lasts only one year, and states may
balk at expanding programs that they will ultimately have to fund themselves.
President Joe Biden’s infrastructure plan would go even further, sending states
$400 billion over 10 years to beef up home care. Foster, the researcher and
pediatrician, said that this would be “a critically needed increase” in
resources but that it isn’t a long-term solution. She pointed instead to a
proposal by a group of Democratic lawmakers to permanently expand the
entitlement for home and community-based services and standardize it
nationwide, with the costs borne entirely by the federal government. Calling it
“a once-in-a-generation opportunity,” she conceded it would carry a high price
tag. As the pandemic ebbs and testing and vaccination sites slow down, some
nurses are expected to return to home care. But Mead has seen no sign of it:
She lacks nursing coverage two nights this coming week, and expects to pass
them, vigilant, caring for her son.
^ Sadly, these people are not
what the media usually focuses on so not many people know of their hardships
and the help they desperately need. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/news/keep-son-alive-sleep-shifts-150545087.html
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