Barron\'s - April 6 2020

(Joyce) #1

28 BARRON’S April 6, 2020


L


indsay Asherman’s job has


never been easy. The 27-


year-old single mother of


two is a hospice aide in San


Antonio. She cares for up to


seven dying patients a day.


Now, the pandemic


sweeping across the country has made


Asherman’s challenging profession all


but impossible and strained her pre-


carious finances. Over the past couple


of weeks, she has been barred from


seeing about 40% of her patients, as


nursing facilities and family members


turn away outside aides to minimize


potential exposure to the coronavirus.


When she does see patients, she has to


do something that seems unnatural to


a caregiver accompanying patients


through their final days: keep her dis-


tance. “It’s hard for me to sit there and


not cuddle up next to them and give


them a hug,” she says.


Adding to the stress: When she


doesn’t see patients, she doesn’t get


paid, and she has no safety net if she


gets sick and can’t work. She needs


every penny of her $16-an-hour wages


to cover basics like child care and ex-


tra meals for her kids while schools


are closed. She drives around the city


to see patients, raising the odds of


exposure to the virus, but she has no


health insurance and no emergency


fund to draw on. “I wash my hands all


the time,” she says, “and keep hand


sanitizer in my pocket.”


An army of 4.5 million direct care-


givers is confronting an invisible en-


emy. This direct-care workforce in-


cludes nursing assistants in nursing


homes and assisted-living facilities,


home health aides, and hospice aides.


They are the cornerstone of care for


older Americans, helping millions of


elderly or disabled adults bathe, dress,


eat, and get through the day. While


much of America hunkers down at


home, they’re at the forefront of the


U.S. health-care system, wondering if


they’re exposing themselves, their


families, and their patients to a pan-


demic.


In return, they get low wages,


sparse benefits, and heavy workloads.


In 2018, the median direct-care


worker earned $12.27 an hour, an


inflation-adjusted increase of just


three cents from 2008, according to


research and consulting group PHI.


Decades of experience don’t necessar-


ily bring higher pay. After nearly 30


years as a nursing assistant, 63-year-


old Mary McClendon makes just $13


an hour. “There’s no such thing as a


banking account,” says McClendon,


who works at a nursing home in


Detroit. “We work paycheck to


paycheck.”


Training and career-development


opportunities can be scant. Home


health aides and nursing assistants


whose employers are Medicare-


certified typically must have at least 75


hours of training, but personal-care


aides helping older adults in their


homes don’t have to meet this federal


standard. (Requirements vary by state.)


About 15% of direct-care workers


live in poverty, while 44% live in low-


income households, according to PHI.


Many work multiple jobs, increasing


the potential of virus exposure for


themselves and their patients. Often,


they have no paid sick leave, and one


out of five nursing assistants working


in nursing homes are single parents,


according to PHI, facing additional


pressures as school districts extend


closures.


Even before the coronavirus came


along, the risks and demands of the


job were daunting. The average nurs-


ing assistant in a nursing home, for


example, cares for 12 residents at a


time and is injured three times more


frequently than the typical American


worker, according to PHI.


That job description doesn’t attract


any surplus of applicants. There’s a


chronic shortage of direct-care work-


ers, made acute by the current crisis,


according to many of those working in


the field.


“Workforce is our No. 1 issue. We


cannot find enough people,” says Kim-


berly Green, chief operating officer of


Diakonos Group, which operates 20


long-term-care facilities in Oklahoma.


“At one of my buildings, we had like 13


openings the other day,” she says. The


level of vacancies is unusual. “I’m


getting more and more calls every


day,” she says, from staff members


who are “tired, scared, overloaded,


and overwhelmed.”


Green in mid-March made a public


appeal for help. “I went on TV and


“There’s


no such


thing as


a banking


account.


We work


paycheck


to


paycheck”


Mary McClendon,
nursing assistant Nick Hagen

The Perils of


Working on


The Front


Lines of Care


The direct-care workforce at the

forefront of the U.S. health-care system

gets low wages, sparse benefits, heavy

workloads—and exposure to coronavirus

By ELEANOR LAISE


Mary McClendon
stands outside the
nursing home in
Detroit where she
works as a nursing
assistant.

April 6, 2020 BARRON’S 29

said, ‘You want a job? We have jobs,’ ”


she recalls. The company will provide


“on-the-job training” for new hires


who want to be nursing aides. The


new employees can start as hospitality


aides, she says, answering call lights


and getting blankets for residents, and


receive on-site training in bathing,


dressing, patient transfers, and other


nursing-aide responsibilities.


The nursing-home industry says


it’s fighting for flexibility to help facili-


ties staff up quickly. “Quality care


begins with our direct caregivers, and


we have seen their extraordinary com-


mitment to our seniors during this


pandemic,” Dr. David Gifford, chief


medical officer at the American


Health Care Association, a nursing-


home industry group, said in a state-


ment. The group has urged federal


and state governments to waive licens-


ing requirements that could prevent


health-care professionals from work-


ing across state lines, as many have in


recent weeks. The industry is also


advocating for “rapid training of un-


employed individuals to help with


basic tasks,” Gifford said, “so nurses


and aides can concentrate on the sick


residents, and we can potentially ad-


dress any shortages due to employees


needing to stay home.”


As the crisis intensifies, dwindling


supplies of masks and other protective


gear are amplifying direct-care work-


ers’ frustrations.


Last month, McClendon’s employer


told staff members that if they wanted


to wear masks around the nursing


home, they’d have to buy their own,


she says. “Why would we have to go


out and buy masks for the facility


when we are working here?” asks


McClendon. The nursing home


“should supply us with everything we


need.” Just over a week later, the SEIU


Healthcare Michigan union said that


workers at McClendon’s facility, Am-


bassador Nursing and Rehabilitation


Center in Detroit, were reporting sev-


eral coronavirus cases among staff


and a resident at the nursing home.


The facility, which is part of the Villa


Healthcare chain, didn’t respond to


requests for comment. Villa Health-


care didn’t respond to requests for


comment.


McClendon, meanwhile, says she’s


“very worried” about her own poten-


tial exposure to the coronavirus. On a


scale of one to 10, she says, “I’d give


youa50.”


Home health aides may be at a par-


ticular disadvantage when it comes to


getting protective equipment. In a


recent survey by the Home Care Asso-


ciation of New York State, nearly 70%


of providers said they don’t have ac-


cess to adequate personal protective


equipment. “We have been on the bot-


tom of the totem pole” for procuring


supplies, says Amy Champagne, di-


rector of clinical operations for the


Medical Team, a home health agency


based in Reston, Va., while hospitals


and other facilities get top priority.


“We need to remain calm and can’t


overuse supplies,” she says. The com-


pany is telling workers, “Don’t double-


glove when you don’t need to double-


glove. Don’t wear gowns when you


don’t need to.”


The age and occupation of older


direct-care workers increase their


risk. People 55 and older account for


23% of the direct-care workforce, ac-


cording to PHI. Josefa Guardian, 79,


earns $10 an hour as a home-care


attendant in Hebbronville, Texas.


Finding basics like bread and drink-


ing water has become a challenge in


the small town, Guardian says, and


onedayinlateMarchshewenttofive


different stores trying to get enough


food for her patients. Guardian has


diabetes, which can increase the odds


of serious complications from the


coronavirus, and when she’s not at


work, she stays home with her 82-


year-old husband, she says. As a part-


time worker, she has no paid sick


leave or vacation time. Her children


want her to quit, she says, but “I don’t


like to watch TV all day.” She and her


husband are scared, she says, “but


we’re very, very careful.”


Lack of paid sick leave, combined


with potentially unpaid periods of


self-isolation due to coronavirus expo-


sure, can be financially devastating for


direct-care workers. Only about 35%


of direct-care workers who take time


off for family care or medical reasons


qualify for paid leave, according to


PHI. Ashley Nixon, 32, a nursing as-


sistant at a nursing home in Collins-


ville, Okla., was recently forced to stay


home for two weeks without pay be-


cause a member of her household had


traveled to Florida—raising fears of


coronavirus exposure.


“I was thinking, ‘How am I going to


pay my bills?’ ” says Nixon, who also


lost income from her second job,


working in a special-education class-


room, when the schools closed. “I’ve


been on a spending freeze,” she says,


cutting her weekly grocery budget in


half, to $50, and giving up her daily


indulgence—a frozen Dr Pepper from


the convenience store.


On top of the physical and financial


stress, direct-care workers are shoul-


dering the emotional burden of their


patients’ isolation, as communal activ-


ities are canceled and visitors are kept


at bay. They’re connecting patients to


their families on video calls, asking


residents to write messages for loved


ones on whiteboards, and monitoring


families as they commune through


panes of glass. Emily Phillips, a nurs-


ing assistant in Collinsville, cares for a


resident whose husband, a regular


visitor, now has to stand outside the


window. “They can talk a little bit, but


it’s mostly just to look at each other


and see that they’re OK and know


they love each other,” she says. “You


want to just let him in the door. But


we know that it’s very unsafe.”


For workers and advocates who


have long raised concerns about facil-


ity understaffing, the heartbreak is


mixed with bitterness over all of their


unheeded warnings. “It’s sad. We’ve


been crying for much too long now for


help, and it takes the coronavirus to


get attention,” says Francine Rico, a


nursing-home nursing assistant in


Chicago and member of the executive


board of the SEIU Healthcare Illinois


Indiana union. For nursing assistants


trying to care for 13 or 14 residents at a


time, she says, “everything you do,


you’re in a hurry.” But “for 99% of


these residents, this is their final rest-


ing spot, and they should leave this


world with dignity and respect.”


For years, “everybody talked about


how the baby boomers were aging and


they were going to really tax the long-


term care industry, yet we’ve not been


able to get anybody to act on any mea-


sures to ensure there are more” nurs-


ing assistants, says Lisa Sweet, chief


clinical officer at the National Associa-


tion of Health Care Assistants. “Then


you throw a pandemic into the mix,”


she says. “I’m really kind of angry


right now.”


What is the breaking point for


direct-care workers in the teeth of the


pandemic? The nursing-home indus-


try says that some workers, at least,


are undaunted. “We have seen staff


come to work even when Covid is in


the building and masks and other


supplies are low or unavailable,” says


the American Health Care Associa-


tion’s Gifford.


But even in the face of dismal eco-


nomic prospects, some workers are


giving notice. At the Medical Team,


roughly 5% of workers have quit, says


Champagne. At Diakonos, Green ex-


pects to lose more staff as the crisis


drags on.


As for Asherman, the hospice aide


in San Antonio, she’s mulling alterna-


tive career paths. “There’s not a lot


that’s open,” she says. “I thought


about Amazon. They need people.”B


“I’m getting


more and


more calls


every day”


from staff


members


who are


“tired,


scared,


overloaded,


and over-


whelmed.”


Kimberly Green,
Diakonos Group

Josh Huskin

Josefa Guardian,
a home-care
attendant, picks up
a prescription for
one of her patients
at a pharmacy in
Hebbronville, Texas.
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