Lawmakers push to require nursing homes to offer virtual visits
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[April 21, 2021]
By GRACE BARBIC
Capitol News Illinois
gbarbic@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Lawmakers and advocates are
calling for the Illinois General Assembly to pass a bill that would
require nursing homes to offer virtual visits for residents to prevent
social isolation during the COVID-19 pandemic.
AARP Illinois, the senior advocacy group which helped craft Senate Bill
2137, held a virtual news conference Tuesday to emphasize the necessity
of such legislation as the ongoing pandemic prevents nursing home
residents from in-person visits and participating in other daily social
activities.
SB 2137, modeled after a law that already exists in New Jersey, is
sponsored by Sen. Jacqueline Collins, D-Chicago, co-sponsored by Sen.
Donald DeWitte, R-St.Charles, and sponsored by Rep. Anna Moeller,
D-Elgin, in the House.
AARP associate state director Lori Hendren noted there have been over
70,000 positive COVID-19 cases in nursing homes, and over 10,300
virus-related deaths in Illinois – or 43 percent of the state’s total
death count – have been nursing home residents.
“There should be no hesitation, we feel, from elected officials,”
Hendren said. “This is a compassionate plan that has been worked through
with listening sessions, and we want to make sure the voices and the
faces of everyone we love are accessible.”
The bipartisan effort would create social isolation prevention policies,
Collins said, to ensure nursing home residents have the right and
opportunity to see their loved ones.
Melissa Rowley, of Chicago, shared her experience with nursing home
visitation restrictions as the legal guardian of her 88-year-old cousin,
Dorothy, who was developmentally disabled.
When the pandemic restricted in-person visits, Rowley purchased her
cousin a device so that she could communicate with her virtually and get
a better idea of Dorothy’s mental state outside of updates from nurse
practitioners.
Rowley said “it was like pulling teeth” to get the nurses to assist
Dorothy with using the technology. Dorothy eventually contracted
COVID-19 and Rowley turned to hospice services, which helped connect her
virtually as Dorothy’s condition worsened.
Rowley said when she was finally able to visit virtually with her
cousin, it was to say her final goodbyes, as Dorothy lost her battle
with the virus.
“As devastating as it was to do this virtually, I was just so grateful
that I was able to at least see her and virtually tell her all the
things that everyone would want to hear in that situation,” Rowley said.
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Cutline: Sen. Jacqueline Collins, D-Chicago,
discusses a bill that would require nursing homes to offer virtual
visitations. (Credit: Blueroomstream.com)
“I just can't express how much I believe that during
these difficult times, virtual visitation is the least we can do to
help our loved ones in nursing homes to get through all their fear
and isolation and depression from being cut off from everyone, in
the context of the people that they love.”
If the bill becomes law, long-term care facilities would be required
to adopt and implement a set of policies for virtual visitation,
such as the creation of individualized visitation plans, cleaning
and sanitizing protocols for the devices, as well as designating a
person to train staff, social workers, or volunteers to directly
assist residents with technology use.
Illinois state long-term care ombudsman Kelly
Richardson said nursing home residents continue to suffer the
effects of social isolation and loneliness as a result of the
pandemic, which she said can lead to irreversible damage to their
quality of health.
“In fact, 2020 research shows that the harsh consequences of
isolation and loneliness on resident quality of life are alarming,”
Richardson said. “There's a 50 percent increased risk for developing
dementia, a 32 percent increase of stroke, and nearly a fourfold
increased risk of death among heart failure patients. And it doesn't
have to be this way.”
While Richardson said she believes there is no substitute for human
connection, she said she is hopeful this bill would serve as a
safety net until in-person visitation restrictions can safely be
lifted.
For a funding source, the bill notes nursing home operators may
apply for civil monetary penalty funds from the federal Centers for
Medicare and Medicaid Services.
The civil money penalty funds program aims “to improve quality of
life by equipping nursing home staff, administrators and
stakeholders with technical tools and assistance to enhance resident
care.” It’s paid into by fines on nursing homes penalized for
noncompliance with Medicare and Medicaid participation requirements.
Sponsors of the bill said facilities may also request other state
and federal aid available for nursing homes to assist in complying
with this proposal.
“The federal government allowed the state, working with the governor
and Department of Human Services, to expand $1.7 million to assist
in technology apparatus and devices for our community care
individuals,” Collins said. “So I assume that we will have federal
funding coming as well, based on the direction that the
administration is taking in reference to COVID-19.”
SB 2137 passed unanimously out of the Senate Health Committee and is
now awaiting consideration of the full Senate.
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