“Vulnerable people such as
disabled, older and
chronically ill people are not
expendable. We want to live
and offer a lot to society,
too. People are so ready to
write us off as inevitable
collateral damage when they
don’t realize how resilient
and amazing we are.”
Alice Wong
Director of the Disability Visibility Project
and activist living in San Francisco
Even under normal circumstances –
before the spread of the new coronavi-
rus – Clifton Wallace struggled to get re-
liable home health care on a fixed in-
come.
The Indiana resident, a quadriplegic
who is gradually regaining use of his
arms and legs, relies on a tightly choreo-
graphed routine of four home health
workers to get him through each day.
On March 19, the first worker arrived
on schedule at 7 a.m. to get Wallace out
of bed, bathed, dressed and into his
wheelchair before leaving. Then the
agency called. Wallace’s next home
health aide had a personal emergency
and couldn’t make it. There was no one
to replace her.
Wallace said he sat alone in his
wheelchair for seven hours until the
next worker arrived. He soiled himself
and had no way to do anything about it.
He worried how remaining in the chair
would affect the bedsore on his lower
back.
The 60-year-old said he wonders
whether disruptions in care will become
more frequent as COVID-19 spreads.
And will the home health care workers
who do show up bring the virus with
them?
“I have four strangers coming in my
house,” Wallace said, “and I don’t know
where the hell they’ve been.”
The spread of COVID-19 has added
pressure to the home health care in-
dustry, which more than 10 million
Americans rely on for assistance rang-
ing from getting out of bed to wound
care to physical therapy. Many of those
served are elderly or disabled, a pop-
ulation particularly vulnerable if they
contract the virus. They can’t heed the
central advice for staying safe – social
distancing isn’t possible when you de-
pend on in-home care.
“The very thing they need is the
very thing that could also put them at
risk,” said Tricia Neuman, senior vice
president of the Henry J. Kaiser Family
Foundation.
Home care workers have their own
concerns – of getting a patient sick
while trying to provide quality care,
securing personal protective equip-
ment and paying their own bills when
patients fearful of the virus cancel ap-
pointments.
The home health care sector was
strained for resources far before CO-
VID-19, dealing with hundreds of thou-
sands of patients on waiting lists for
services, worker shortages and low
wages. Multiple states have further re-
stricted access to services by closing
adult day centers. State organizations
designed to protect and advocate for
vulnerable adults have suspended in-
person investigations. Officials are
forced to adapt quickly as the situation
changes.
“It very much feels like we are flying
the plane at the same time that we’re
trying to build it,” said Melissa Keyes,
executive director of Indiana Disabil-
ity Rights. “And the information is
Clifton Wallace, 60, of Indiana depends on the tightly scheduled visits of four home health workers to help him get
through the day. He worries about what the spread of COVID-19 will do to his care. WILLIAM BRYANT ROZIER/USA TODAY NETWORK
Home care industry
struggles for answers
Patients, health workers
worry about virus risks
Marisa Kwiatkowski
and Tricia L. Nadolny
USA TODAY
EDDIE HERNANDEZ PHOTOGRAPHY
SeeHOME HEALTH, Page 2D
It started with a trickle.
Fearing that the coronavirus could
wreak havoc once inside densely
packed jails, local officials across the
country quietly began releasing some of
their most vulnerable, including the el-
derly and chronically ill.
The goal, said National Sheriffs’ As-
sociation president Sheriff Daron Hall,
was to reduce the risk both to prisoners
and officers while freeing up space to
quarantine other inmates who may be-
come infected.
Dozens set free during the first wave
of releases early this month have now
become hundreds as state and local
governments have accelerated their
effortsin recent weeks to guard highly
susceptible prison populations, and the
staff working there, against the spread
of the virus.
In Cleveland, officials have moved
more than 700 prisoners out of the Cuy-
ahoga County Jail in less than two
weeks; near Oakland, California, more
than 250 have been set free; in Nash-
ville, Tennessee, up to 300 have been
Fearing outbreak, jails releasing waves of inmates
Kevin Johnson
USA TODAY
See JAILS, Page 2D
The Bergen County Jail
is in Hackensack, N.J.
ANNE-MARIE CARUSO/
USA TODAY NETWORK
The outbreak “is
forcing us to take
action that we
wouldn’t consider
during normal times.”
Gurbir Grewal
New Jersey attorney general
WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. – New York
nurses on the front line of the corona-
virus outbreak are afraid their safety
is being sacrificed so hospitals can
stretch dwindling stockpiles of pro-
tective equipment.
Central to the fear are new Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention
guidelines seeking to help hospitals
conserve medical masks as thou-
sands of New Yorkers are infected
with COVID-19, the disease caused by
the virus.
Some nurses asserted hospital offi-
cials asked them to make a typically
single-use surgical mask last a week,
leaving them to store it in paper bags
between shifts.
Other nurses described begging for
access to higher level N95 masks and
watching fellow nurses get quarantin-
ed after suspected COVID-19 expo-
sures amid shortages.
Mostly, they talked of living in con-
stant dread of infecting themselves or
loved ones with the virus that has
killed more than 18,000 across the
globe and confirmed cases mounted
in New York, surpassing 30,000 on
Wednesday.
“We’re really just beginning this,
which is the scary part,” said Mary-
Lynn Boyts, a nurse at Westchester
Medical Center, about 30 miles north
of New York City. “I feel like we’re go-
ing into a battle we’re just not pre-
pared for.”
Even with millions of masks being
distributed since last week in the
greater New York City area, Gov. An-
drew Cuomo warned hospitals could
run out in coming weeks.
“The burn rate on this equipment is
very, very high. I can’t find any more
equipment. It’s not a question of
money. I don’t care what you’re willing
to pay,” he said at a news briefing
Tuesday. Cuomo said about 2 million
N95 masks could shore up supplies at
the hardest-hit hospitals for any-
where from two to six weeks.
NY nurses
see ‘scary’
shortage
of masks
Hospitals’ demands and
CDC guidelines decried
Frank Esposito and David Robinson
USA TODAY
See NURSES, Page 4D
Lori Glazer of Ossining, N.Y., rides the
empty Metro-North train into New
York City during what would typically
be morning rush hour on Wednesday.
Glazerworks as a registered nurse.
SETH HARRISON/USA TODAY NETWORK
For all the latest developments,
visit coronavirus.usatoday.com.
Your one-stop portal
for the news you need
NATION’S HEALTH
USA TODAY | FRIDAY, MARCH 27, 2020 | SECTION D
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