French care home looks beyond COVID with table football and minigolf
Send a link to a friend
[May 07, 2021]
By Eric Gaillard
VILLENEUVE-LOUBET, France (Reuters) -
Bernard Sellier stood a little hunched at the table, his hands gripping
the rods of tiny football players and a boyish grin on his 86-year-old
face at a return to normal life in his French care home.
For months during the COVID-19 crisis, there had been strict rules on
social interaction and visiting rights as staff fought to keep a
ferocious killer of the weak and elderly at bay.
Now The Fig Tree and other care homes are lifting the toughest
restrictions. Official data shows 99% of care home residents have
received at least one COVID shot, and more than three quarters have had
both.
"I'm not sick, I'm doing very well, everything is good," said Sellier as
he moved on to the home's chicken roost to collect eggs. On an outdoor
patio, residents nudged their balls towards two mini putting holes.
During the first wave, the coronavirus ripped through nursing homes with
devastating effect. The government and carehome operators were caught
off guard.
They struggled to get hold of face masks and other protective equipment
as the disease triggered a global shortage. When France unwound its
first lockdown a year ago, nearly 40% of all coronavirus-related deaths
had occurred in care homes.
Just 14 COVID-related deaths have been recorded in homes so far this
month, about 1% of the national figure.
[to top of second column]
|
Residents Paul Souveton, Bernard Sellier and Frederique Benichou
play mini golf at "Les Figuiers" retirement home (EHPAD - Housing
Establishment for Dependant Elderly People) amid the coronavirus
disease (COVID-19) pandemic, in Villeneuve-Loubet, France, May 5,
2021. Picture taken May 5, 2021. REUTERS/Eric Gaillard
"We already feel safer," said resident Marie Maucelli.
Some precautions remain in place, in line with national guidelines,
as France's vaccination rollout gathers pace. Families cannot hug
their loved ones and non-vaccinated visitors must stay behind a
plexiglass screen.
The government has acknowledged the toll that depriving the elderly
of their families' love took on their wellbeing during the crisis
but says it was necessary to save lives.
Vaccine hesitancy rates in France were among the highest in Europe
at the start of the inoculation campaign but official data shows
that a large majority of care home staff have received at least one
dose.
"Initially I wasn't really in favour of getting vaccinated," said
Nelly Prudhomme, who runs activities at The Fig Tree. "But I figured
it was good to do. Primarily for our residents, to allow them to get
out."
(Reporting by Eric Gaillard; writing by Richard Lough; editing by
Philippa Fletcher)
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |