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Pandemic Worsens Staff Shortages At St. Louis Nursing Homes, Putting Residents and Workers At Risk

Frank and Bonnie Seifried relax together at the Woodlands of Arnold in March, just before visitation was suspended.
Bonnie Seifried
Frank and Bonnie Seifried relax together at the Woodlands of Arnold in March, just before visitation was suspended.

Bonnie Seifried used to sit outside her husband鈥檚 window every day.

The nursing home where Frank Seifried lived, the Woodlands of Arnold, stopped allowing in-person visits in March 鈥 so every morning, she set up a folding chair and a polka dot umbrella under a tree outside.

Seifried sat with her husband for hours, separated by a thick layer of glass, writing out messages to him on a little whiteboard and sharing updates about their kids and grandkids.

Sometimes, she noticed, the staff wouldn鈥檛 check on him for hours at a time.

鈥淗e鈥檇 have to go to the bathroom, and I鈥檇 get up and start pacing,鈥 Seifried said. 鈥淓very time I'd see somebody walk by in the hall, I'd bang on the window. It would be nothing to put on the call light and have to wait for an hour or two or three.鈥

But the situation deteriorated after the coronavirus arrived at the Woodlands of Arnold, sickening , including Frank Seifried.

Bonnie Seifried watched from the window as her husband struggled to breathe, his face flushed 鈥渇ire red.鈥 She called the front desk repeatedly, asking that someone give him his prescribed breathing treatments and take his temperature, but she said the nursing staff was completely overwhelmed.

Nursing homes across the U.S. have long struggled with staff shortages, but families and workers in St. Louis say the crisis has worsened in recent months, as the pandemic has pushed some facilities to a breaking point. Faced with the possibility of contracting the coronavirus themselves, nursing home staff 鈥 often women of color earning a low hourly wage 鈥 have had to weigh whether the paycheck is worth the risk.

For Shunda Whitfield, caring for residents at Estates of Spanish Lake in north St. Louis County is satisfying and, at times, exhausting.

Most mornings, Whitfield plays gospel music to calm the 20 residents on her floor, many of whom have dementia. As she moves from room to room, she takes each person to the bathroom, then helps them eat breakfast and take a shower.

Shunda Whitfield, a certified nursing assistant at Estates of Spanish Lake in north St. Louis County.
Shunda Whitfield
Shunda Whitfield, a certified nursing assistant at Estates of Spanish Lake in north St. Louis County.

On a good day, Whitfield has help from a second nursing assistant. But if a coworker calls in sick or doesn鈥檛 show up, she鈥檒l sometimes work up to 16 hours a day by herself.

鈥淲e lost a lot of staff during the pandemic, so we鈥檙e pretty short in the building,鈥 Whitfield said. 鈥淎 lot of people was just scared. Some people left voluntarily, some left from health issues, and some people contracted the COVID and didn鈥檛 come back.鈥

At least at Estates of Spanish Lake had confirmed cases of COVID-19 as of June 28, the most recent data provided to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

Whitfield herself became seriously ill with COVID-19 in April and isolated herself in a bedroom at home, worried that her family might catch the coronavirus. 鈥淢y husband would talk to me through the door when my anxiety would get high,鈥 she remembered. 鈥淚鈥檇 start crying and panicking like, 鈥業 can鈥檛 hardly breathe.鈥欌

After Whitfield recovered, more than a month later, her doctor warned that it might not be safe for her to go back to her job at the nursing home. She has lupus, an autoimmune disease, and she鈥檚 at a higher risk of complications if she contracts the virus again.

But without a stable income, Whitfield worried that she wouldn鈥檛 be able to support her family or cover the cost of her medication. So she returned to work.

鈥淭he 鈥榳hat if鈥 is on my mind every time I come to work,鈥 she said. 鈥淲hat if I take a chance and contract it again? What if it'd be worse this time?鈥

鈥業t scared me so bad鈥

About 1 in 4 long-term care workers in the U.S. are Black, compared to about 12% of all workers nationwide. Overall, these workers are disproportionately , with 58% making less than $30,000 in 2018.

Michael Howard, a nursing assistant at Grand Manor Nursing & Rehabilitation in St. Louis, said he personally knows workers who have decided the pay is too low to put their lives on the line.

His friend and coworker, Cynthia Whitfield, died of COVID-19 in late April. The medication technician, of no relation to Shunda Whitfield, was reportedly after she contracted the coronavirus.

鈥淚t scared me so bad, because she was younger than me,鈥 said Howard, 62. 鈥淲e all came together, we prayed, and we cried it out. Then we pulled up our bootstraps and kept going.鈥

But as more workers have quit or fallen ill, he added, the remaining staff has had to work double shifts to make sure the residents are cared for. 鈥淲hen you鈥檙e short staffed, you become vulnerable because you get tired,鈥 Howard said. 鈥淵ou'd be woke, but your body is not there with you like it should be.鈥

Michael Howard has worked as a certified nursing assistant for about 20 years and says he personally knows nursing home workers who have decided to leave the industry during the pandemic.
David Kovaluk
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漏 2024 外网天堂
Michael Howard has worked as a certified nursing assistant for about 20 years and says he personally knows nursing home workers who have decided to leave the industry during the pandemic.

Mersades Shobe, director of operations at Grand Manor, said that it can be difficult to recruit staff at nursing homes in St. Louis because facilities in St. Louis County can often pay a higher rate. But she added that Grand Manor currently doesn鈥檛 have a staff shortage.

鈥淚t鈥檚 challenging at times, but things are getting better,鈥 Shobe said, adding that there is sometimes a 鈥渞evolving door鈥 of staff.

But some fear this intense pressure could have lasting consequences on workers. A issued in September warned the 鈥淗erculean effort鈥 demanded of nursing home staff during the pandemic will likely 鈥渆xacerbate turnover and staff shortages in the long term.鈥

Moving forward

Throughout the U.S., nursing home residents make up a disproportionate share of COVID-19 cases and deaths.

At least 6,416 people have tested positive for the coronavirus in long-term care facilities in Missouri, and 1,029 have died . The actual number of cases and deaths is likely higher, given that the federal government only began collecting data from nursing homes in mid-May.

In St. Louis County alone, 2,320 residents contracted the virus across 98 long-term care facilities as of Aug. 28 鈥 and 494 died from COVID-19, accounting for

Edna Mukelabai, resident care director at Parc Provence in Creve Coeur, remembered an evening when three residents died in the span of an hour.

Frank Seifried waves through the window at the Woodlands of Arnold during a visit with his wife Bonnie Seifried.
Bonnie Seifried
Frank Seifried waves through the window at the Woodlands of Arnold during a visit with his wife, Bonnie Seifried.

鈥淭hat night, I went home at 1:30 a.m. and I sat in the car and cried,鈥 Mukelabai recounted during a recent organized by the Washington University Institute for Public Health. 鈥淭hat's the first time I broke down and realized that this was very, very very serious.鈥

Though rates of new infections in St. Louis County nursing homes have slowed in recent months, some families say basic care is still lacking 鈥 and that makes it harder for residents to thrive.

鈥淲hen you talk about quality of care, it goes beyond they didn't die last night,鈥 said Michelle Gralnick, whose parents live at Delmar Gardens West. 鈥淚t's easy for people to say, 鈥榃ell, they're getting food, and they're getting clothed, right?鈥 Yeah, but when they moved into a nursing home, the emphasis was supposed to be on home.鈥

In February, Gralnick cofounded the Delmar Gardens West Family Council, a group of about two dozen who advocate for their relatives at the Chesterfield facility.

Her mom has multiple sclerosis and has been hospitalized several times for infected bed sores. Under Missouri mandate, the 81-year-old should be repositioned every two hours, but sometimes she鈥檚 been left in bed all day, Gralnick said.

鈥淚n general, basic needs are not being met because the staff that is there are either pulled in too many directions, or the seasoned staff that had relationships with the residents are no longer there,鈥 she added.

Delmar Gardens West did not respond to a request for comment.

鈥極verworked, underpaid, dead tired鈥

Bonnie Seifried no longer sits by her husband鈥檚 window.

The 89-year-old retired dentist contracted the coronavirus twice, first in May and again in July. He died of COVID-19 on July 24. 漏 2024 外网天堂 contacted the Woodlands of Arnold, but the facility did not respond to a request for comment.

Seifried doesn鈥檛 blame the employees at the facility, who she said are 鈥渙verworked, underpaid and dead tired.鈥 She spent years at the nursing home, first as a volunteer when her mother was a resident and later as an employee for nearly eight years in their administration and accounting departments. And she says that鈥檚 why it鈥檚 been difficult for her to watch the extraordinary pressures put on its staff.

鈥淭his is not an indictment of any one person or any facility,鈥 Seifried explained. 鈥淭his is a system that鈥檚 terribly broken.鈥

Still, the image of her husband鈥檚 last hours haunts her. She remembers the fear in his eyes as he lay alone in his room and regrets that she wasn鈥檛 there to hold his hand.

In her apartment, she keeps a stack of handmade signs that she taped to his window, reading 鈥淲e all love you,鈥 and 鈥淭here is flu, I can鈥檛 come in.鈥

Eventually, she said, she鈥檒l try to let them go.

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Shahla Farzan is a PhD ecologist and science podcast editor at American Public Media. She was previously a reporter at 漏 2024 外网天堂.