Tag: 上海新三对老三队发廊

Barrie nurse raises $1,000 for food bank with reusable operating-room caps

Hats off to Barrie surgical nurse Jen Miller – or should that be caps?

Fellow nurse Terri Lynn Pickard said Miller deserves a public pat on the back after she decided to make reusable operating-room caps for the surgical unit at Royal Victoria Regional Health Centre.

Miller sold the caps for $10 each, raising more than $1,000 for the Barrie Food Bank.

“She is such a well-respected individual in our workplace and has taken her time to make sure everyone gets a hat that suits their needs,” Pickard said in an email. “As always, she is thinking of others before herself.”

Pickard said operating-room caps have been a precious commodity during COVID-19 and Miller’s reusable caps ensure there are enough to go around.

“There has been such a shortage on disposable surgical caps,” Pickard said. “The same disposable hats are also used for patients, so Jen figured if we used cloth hats we could save the disposable ones for patients.”

Daily mask and hat counts are done during the pandemic to monitor the supply, Pickard said.

This Toronto plumber is selling candy chutes for Halloween to raise money for the Daily Bread Food Bank. The demand has been overwhelming

What do you do when the long-standing trick-or-treating Halloween tradition is possibly in jeopardy amid the pandemic?

If you are plumber Geoff Burke, you put your building skills to use by making and installing candy chutes outside people’s homes.

“Kids are definitely having a tough year with school cancellations, not being able to see their friends and all that, so I thought, why not provide a little bit of life for these kids who have missed out on so much already this year,” said Burke, a resident in Toronto’s west end and owner of Watermark Plumbing Services Inc.

“Along with what the experts are saying, this is one of the safer holidays that we can celebrate safely outside.”

Canada’s top public health official Dr. Theresa Tam, told reporters on Tuesday that Halloween need not be cancelled altogether. According to Tam, public health leaders believe it’s possible to strike ” between risk and fun if outdoors.

Tam urged community members to observe existing safety measures — such as masking up, using hand sanitizer and observing physical distancing — while out on the candy hunt.

Toronto, Ottawa and Peel region are Ontario’s hot zones, but Ontario’s medical health officer Dr. David Williams said, as of Tuesday, recommendations for Halloween in those spots haven’t yet been finalized.

Meanwhile Burke, 32, has come up with a creative solution to pandemic trick-or-treating: distributing candy through makeshift chutes installed in front of people’s homes.

The idea came to him a few weeks ago when he read a story about a man in Ohio who created a candy chute as a means to distribute candy to kids during Halloween while safely observing physical distancing guidelines. Burke’s own two-year-old daughter is at an age when she’s starting to enjoy the outside activities and it would be hard to explain to her why trick-or-treating is not happening, he said.

When he put out a call over the Thanksgiving weekend, the community response was swift and overwhelming. He had to stop the requests after getting 400 of them.

“It was quickly getting out of hand,” he said about people’s interest.

The chutes are made from drainage pipes, which have been donated by Burke’s supplier, . The pipes are then painted orange and decorated just to give them an extra festive look.

The plan is to use volunteers from Daily Bread Food Bank to help put them up, starting next week.

Burke only asks that for each chute installed, a minimum $25 donation be made to help the food bank. Earlier in April he used his plumbing services to raise over $4,500 for the same initiative, after realizing COVID-19 was leaving many people out of food options.

“To me, it’s just a way to help people get out there, stay socially distanced and have a little bit of fun. It’s been a difficult time for everybody for too long,” he said.

Burke is not the only person to think outside the box while trying to find a way to celebrate this upcoming Halloween.

On his front porch in Brooklin, north of Whitby, Scott Bennett has installed a candy slide through which he’s planning to drop candy straight into the bags of trick-or-treaters on Halloween.

He has on how to build one such slide on his YouTube channel where he usually posts various projects of his craft in woodworking. With “as few tools as possible” he hopes people will quickly learn to do it and safely take part in Halloween.

“I think our kids are going through enough change right now, and adults are potentially stressed about things,” he said, noting Halloween is a magical time of the year and at this stage of the pandemic it’s really important that people get a chance to see some change in their routine.

“I don’t want to be in my house with the lights off. I want to be out on the porch talking to my neighbours, celebrating with everyone.”

With files from Tonda MacCharles

Gilbert Ngabo is a Star breaking news reporter based in Toronto. Follow him on Twitter:

COVID-19 had a devastating effect on the quality of life of nursing home residents. We may never know how much because some homes hit pause on assessing it

In the middle of the spring long-term care lockdown, 87-year-old Devora Greenspon likened loneliness to a pain in her heart.

Now, with among 216 residents in 86 Ontario nursing homes, Greenspon is girding for the isolation of a second wave.

“Being alone in one room every day almost made me crazy,” she said in a written statement to the government-created Long-Term Care COVID-19 Commission.

Greenspon speaks for many residents who survived the nursing home lockdown or, after months alone, lost the ability to walk, eat or even coherently speak.

The wellbeing of those residents is supposed to be captured by care-plan assessments documented by staff and sent to the Canadian Institute for Health Information (CIHI), an independent not-for-profit funded by federal and provincial governments along with universities and research institutes.

Using these assessments, CIHI publishes quarterly “health indicator” data that show, among other things, a rise or fall in the incidence of worsened mood or depression, the ability to manage daily activities like dressing, bladder control, weight loss and pain.

It’s unlikely that the depth of Greenspon’s emotional devastation is included in the CIHI indicators.

That’s because early last spring, as the virus hit residents and staff, the province passed an emergency measures act that let homes opt out of those assessments, “unless they involve changes of a significant nature.”

Greenspon’s home, Extendicare Bayview, “paused” assessments so staff could better focus on “providing resident care, combatting the outbreaks and removing the virus from the homes,” Extendicare Canada said. As of July 17, all Ontario homes have resumed reporting.

— will ever be known.

University of Waterloo professor John Hirdes, a gerontology expert, told the long-term care commission tasked with examining Ontario’s COVID response that allowing homes to cease assessments means “they turned the lights off…and that was probably a mistake.”

Collection of the data helps individual homes track resident needs, pinpointing problems that need quick action.

The health indicator database for Ontario’s 626 homes also helps researchers understand the different ways the lockdown affected residents — and how some homes did better than others — to protect against isolation in future outbreaks.

At homes with severe outbreaks, where administrators were more likely to stop the health assessments, the information gap means staff did not have this key tracker of resident decline during the most recent CIHI reporting period of April, May and June — the height of the first wave.

In homes that continued the assessments, the data can offer lessons and, if the government calls for another lockdown that bans families or friends, a call for a different approach.

At the City of Toronto’s Seven Oaks home, which had a serious outbreak, health indicators show residents suffered in bladder control and the “activities of daily life” as COVID surged.

While the outbreak at the Region of Peel’s Sheridan Villa was not as severe as some, its data showed a small increase in depression.

Peel manager Mary Connell watched residents’ emotional slide, an observation later validated by her home’s assessment data. “I dread the thought they will try a lockdown again.”

New government-imposed restrictions have begun.

Homes in Toronto and Peel are now allowed to limit residents’ outside excursions with family or friends.

There’s a growing fear that another ban on visitors would force families to spend winter visits standing in the cold, watching through windows as loved ones spiral once again.

Hirdes, the gerontology expert, worries about the impact of the second surge on residents already enfeebled by the first one.

“The typical frailty trajectory we see toward death is one where people start off at one level and something bad happens to them and their function goes way down and when they come back up, they come to a level where their function is not quite as great as before and then they go along and they take another hit, and then they go down and come back and they’re not quite as good as they were before and eventually, they don’t have the capacity to deal with something.”

CIHI hasn’t determined how many homes stopped assessing the health of residents in April, May and June, though Hirdes said he believes most homes completed the assessments.

The Star obtained a worth of quarterly health indicator data for Ontario homes. When collected properly, the health indicators are assessed by a nurse who meets with each resident and speaks with personal support workers and families, although as Hirdes points out relatives were not in homes last spring.

The Star is using the data as an anecdotal snapshot of the first lockdown, when people like Greenspon sat in rooms and withered.

Peel Region’s Connell said Sheridan Villa used the worsening depression data to focus on individual residents who needed help.

One woman, a fashionista, lost her spark and spent her days staring out the window, unspeaking. Staff put a clothing mannequin next to the window and the woman began helping Connell choose new outfits for the mannequin, creating a new ensemble every week. Workers sat with her and read Vogue magazine.

“We know she likes the company of men and we don’t have a lot of men in the home so we bring men in from other departments and they have tea with her,” Connell said, adding that her mood has since improved.

Without indicators from some of the worst hit homes, Hirdes said the extent to which the pandemic may have worsened some residents’ frailty is unknown.

“Without those data, we don’t know how much worse off or how much more frail (residents) have become as a result of COVID. That increased frailty makes them more vulnerable to wave two.”

The Star sent CIHI examples of homes hit with serious outbreaks but whose generated by internal assessments showed a minor impact, or in some cases, slight improvements.

Those numbers seemed counterintuitive, given the loss of staff to care for residents or the fact that during these months the military or hospitals were called in to handle what they would later call dire conditions.

CIHI explained that while the year’s worth of data includes assessments over four quarters, homes that did not complete assessments during the pandemic surge show indicators based on only the prior three quarters.

At Hawthorne Place in North York, 51 residents died and the workforce was decimated due to infections, departures over family health concerns or the government directive that required staff to work in one home only.

Hawthorne Place was one of five homes given help from the Canadian Armed Forces’ Joint Task Force and later, was among 11 temporarily managed by hospitals.

On May 20, a Brigadier General detailed the conditions inside those five homes.

His report said residents at Hawthorne Place cried for up to two hours before staff came to help; some choked while being force-fed; others were moved in and out of bed forcefully.

When the health indicators for Hawthorne Place were released, they showed improvements in almost every indicator, including mood/depression, weight loss and pain.

Those were incomplete. Responsive Group, which manages Hawthorne Place for Rykka Care Centres, told the Star it followed the government’s emergency regulations and did not complete these assessments of residents during the outbreak.

“…Notwithstanding a global pandemic, we expect our indicators to improve every year,” the spokesperson said.

Responsive Group said the military’s report on Hawthorne Place triggered a 21-day inspection by the Ministry of Long-Term Care, adding that inspectors “could not corroborate several of the (military’s) findings.”

“These are just some of the examples where allegations by the CAF were not borne out and they painted Hawthorne Place as a home with pervasive issues as opposed to a home in crisis during a global pandemic that required staffing assistance for its residents. The report issued by the CAF is not a reflection of the quality of care Hawthorne Place aspires to or is known for,” the spokesperson said.

Responsive Group said it “took each of the allegations very seriously.”

“Anything less than an engaging and caring home for our residents is unacceptable and does not meet the high standards we set for ourselves each day.”

A CIHI spokesperson confirmed that it “received less assessments in 2020 Q1 as compared to previous quarters.”

The drop in assessments could be due to a staff focus on the pandemic instead of quarterly assessments or a “reduction in the number of residents,” CIHI said.

More than 1,800 long-term care residents died from COVID in the pandemic’s first wave, and many homes did not admit new residents during the outbreak.

Like Hirdes, Dr. Samir Sinha, Sinai Health System’s director of geriatrics, said CIHI’s long-term data is considered high quality.

Sinha said the indicators “tell you how this resident is doing and how can we better plan their care. But if you don’t actually do that assessment, you are almost flying blind.”

At city-run homes, Paul Raftis, general manager of Seniors Services and Long-Term care, said he and his team reviewed the health indicators to help protect residents from a second wave.

During the outbreak, residents’ daily activities declined as rehabilitation, physiotherapy and occupational therapy programs were suspended. They ate meals alone in their rooms and “behavioural symptoms” in both homes worsened, said Raftis.

To prepare for the second wave, Raftis said staff spoke to residents to find ways to handle the depression and loneliness.

This time, he said, homes will continue visits from two essential caregivers, using strict infection-control procedures, “even if the home experiences an outbreak.”

Some socializing will take place with cohorted groups, he said. Staff are being taught to connect with residents, he said — make eye contact, chat, comfort, or play music that connects to each person.

Residents in isolation will eat meals while sitting in the doorway of their room — eating together yet still physically distanced, he said.

Others will eat in the dining room, at tables set apart, so they can still have a conversation.

“We recognize that COVID-19 has had a significant impact on the quality of life for residents, their families, and staff members,” Raftis said.

Data analysis by Andrew Bailey

Moira Welsh is a Toronto-based investigative reporter for the Star. Reach her at . Follow her on Twitter: @moirawelsh