• New Details of Shanghai Nursing Home Covid Deaths Suggest City Is Overw

    From David P.@21:1/5 to All on Thu May 5 23:20:34 2022
    New Details of Shanghai Nursing Home Covid Deaths Suggest City Is Overwhelmed By Wenxin Fan, Apr. 22, 2022 , WSJ

    Late last month, dozens of migrant housemaids and nannies
    queued up for new jobs at Donghai Elderly Care Hospital in
    Shanghai. No experience or certification was required, just
    proof they were vaccinated against Covid-19. People who
    scared easily shouldn’t apply, one said she was told by an
    employment agent. The ones who stayed entered a hospital in
    disarray. Doctors and nurses, stricken with the virus, were
    locked in quarantine. Residents were dying after they caught
    Covid. New hires were pressed into tasks normally done by
    trained workers. One of them, a woman in her 40s in the job
    for less than a week, said she and 3 others carried a body to
    a room used as a morgue at midnight. They struggled to help a
    veteran male orderly zip the body of the swollen woman into a
    thick yellow bag and move her. She said she counted half a
    dozen bodies in the room.

    Shanghai, which has been in near complete lockdown for a
    month to contain the current wave of the virus, the worst to
    hit China since the pandemic began in Wuhan two years ago,
    has reported 450,000 Covid-19 cases since March 1.

    Yet for weeks, Shanghai officials reported no deaths in the
    entire city from Covid. On April 18, officials finally started
    announcing a death count, and now says 36 people have died this
    week, mostly elderly.

    A Wall St. Journal reconstruction of the Donghai hospital outbreak
    provides a more complete picture of the suffering in China’s
    financial capital, with at least 40 deaths of Donghai residents
    alone as of April 6. The deaths came after Covid spread through
    the hospital, sickening hundreds of patients and staff, according
    to more than a dozen patient families and health workers, WeChat
    messages and hospital documents. The experiences raise questions
    about China’s official Covid count and expose vulnerabilities in
    its Covid-control strategies.

    Despite a high rate of vaccination in China overall, with 88% in
    the country vaccinated, millions of elderly people, including most
    of Donghai’s residents, remain unvaccinated. In Shanghai, only 62%
    of people 60 and over are vaccinated. The rate drops to a minuscule
    15% for those over 80. Many are suspicious of the shots, skeptical
    of Chinese brands or vaccines in general, while others figured full vaccination of people around them would be enough of a shield.

    It has left them essentially defenseless against Covid, even though
    the Omicron variant is less deadly than earlier strains of the virus.
    Similar attitudes among elderly residents in Hong Kong contributed to
    deaths there in March, when 7,000 people over 60 died.

    Nursing homes in the U.S. had widespread infections and deaths at
    the beginning of the pandemic, but widespread uptake of vaccines,
    plus some immunity for those infected, has limited serious illness
    in the recent Omicron wave. In contrast, China has said that its
    strict Covid control program, which features frequent compulsory
    tests and strict lockdowns, is the best protection for its most
    vulnerable citizens. The tactics were successful in containing
    previous variants but became less effective in the highly contagious
    Omicron wave.

    China’s zero tolerance approach to Covid, in which anyone testing
    positive and their close contacts must go to quarantine facilities,
    has also left hospitals like Donghai scrambling to find trained staff
    after more-experienced workers were sent into isolation.

    More recently, China has pushed elderly people to get vaccinated,
    including by offering cash incentives. While Chinese vaccines have
    been shown to be less effective than those made in the West, they
    still offer meaningful protection, according to Hong Kong data.

    Vulnerable patients
    ------------------
    At Donghai, the virus became so widespread that Chinese authorities transferred many residents to an overcrowded facility 50 kilometers
    away, without the consent of many families. Doctors had warned
    hospital officials the move introduced new risks for vulnerable
    patients, according to messages in a WeChat group for Donghai
    healthcare workers and families of patients.

    Some relatives couldn’t locate their parents or grandparents for
    days. Others were informed more than a day after their relatives
    died, or found out on their own. Many families said they believed
    that the disruption of their relative’s care was the biggest reason
    they died, based on their health conditions.

    A representative of Donghai hospital didn’t respond to requests for
    comment. The hospital hasn’t commented or confirmed any deaths
    publicly, which were first reported more than three weeks ago by
    the Journal.

    In a letter of condolence sent to some families in early April,
    reviewed by the Journal, Donghai hospital apologized for the deaths
    of some residents who were “unvaccinated and had serious chronic
    illness.”

    The hospital underestimated the speed the virus could spread and
    wasn’t professional in containing the outbreak, the letter said,
    adding: “It was a bloody lesson.”

    China’s National Health Commission and Shanghai’s government didn’t respond to requests for comment.

    Donghai is known as one of Shanghai’s best elderly care hospitals.
    Owned by a state-owned food conglomerate, it houses 1,900 residents,
    including many former state employees, in roughly a dozen low-rise
    buildings southeast of the city center. It reported no Covid-19
    infections in 2021. All 731 staff members had received vaccines and
    booster shots. In late January, the hospital conducted Covid emergency
    drills in which they temporarily locked down the facility within
    30 minutes of a simulated Covid exposure. It conducted over 2,000
    Covid tests in two hours, the hospital reported in its official blog.

    Karl Xue, a Shanghai native who is an interior designer, said operations
    were smooth when he visited his 86-year-old mother in late February.
    He watched as his mother, a former Russian translator who liked
    reading newspaper clippings in bed, walked along the corridors of
    Ward 24, the section of the hospital where she lived with dozens of
    other residents, with help from a physiologist and a hand bar attached
    to the wall.

    Visits suspended
    -----------------
    On March 6, however, a woman coming to see her father was stopped at
    the gate. She said she was told the hospital had suspended visits,
    citing the emergence of new Covid cases in Shanghai. A few days later,
    a staff member tested positive. Hospital officials began sealing off the
    site, though unlike the January drill, this time it took over 24 hours.
    It couldn’t be determined why.

    After lockdown, on March 13, a bus came to take away employees who
    had been in contact with the infected staff member, in keeping with
    China’s policy of isolating anyone possibly exposed to the virus.
    The employees were wrapped in blue disposable hoods and gowns,
    supervised by officials in white hazmat suits.

    In Ward 7, a few buildings away from Mr. Xue’s mother, patients were
    falling ill with Covid. With several positive cases there, officials
    moved almost the entire medical staff in the building into quarantine facilities. Orderlies from other wards were sent in to assist, but the hospital was running low on staff.

    Communications with family members started breaking down. One relative,
    the daughter of a woman in Ward 7, said she made hundreds of calls to
    the hospital over several days but none of them were answered.

    The hospital worked to bring in replacements quickly, including the
    migrant maids and nannies. A dozen new hires arrived at Ward 7 by
    March 21. Each was allocated a makeshift bed in the corridor to sleep
    in and six to a dozen residents to attend to. Nurses who remained on
    the job gave them herbal pills approved by China’s government to help prevent Covid. Within a week, all but 3 from the group of new hires
    were infected. One of those who stayed healthy was left feeding as
    many as 20 residents. Another new hire said she was so worried about
    getting infected that she left her mask on in her sleep. Like many
    hospital workers during the original Covid outbreak in Wuhan in 2020,
    she wore diapers during the day so she wouldn’t have to take off
    protective gear while working. The diapers sometimes soaked through
    her pants, she said. By March 29, two dozen bodies were in the hospital morgue, according to families of the deceased, who cited eyewitnesses.
    One of the new-hire orderlies said he was tasked with dressing a male
    patient who had died after he was infected with Covid. Another new
    orderly said he handled dead bodies for three consecutive days before
    he was infected himself, while another said she saw half a dozen
    hearses parked at the hospital gate at night.

    Mr. Xue’s mother
    --------------------
    In Ward 24, where Mr. Xue’s mother lived, things had been calmer
    than in other wards, which had started moving staff and patients
    to Covid isolation facilities. Although family members couldn’t
    visit Ward 24, nurses were still cutting residents’ hair and nails.
    They shared videos of smiling patients to family members while
    assuring them they would keep them posted on any developments.

    Mr. Xue, now away from Shanghai, checked with an orderly to make
    sure his mother had enough milk and her hearing aids were OK.
    The orderly told Mr. Xue that her workload had increased as
    several colleagues had left to assist other wards. She also
    complained that Mr. Xue’s mother, who had a reputation for being strong-willed, wouldn’t stay in her room. In WeChat exchanges
    between Mr. Xue and his mother on March 28, she sent him cat memes
    and complained that the corridor was eerily quiet, and that orderlies
    now washed her face too fast. “I’m not at ease,” she told him.
    Mr. Xue wrote back that things were much worse outside in the city
    at large. A few hours later, a doctor wrote in the Ward 24 WeChat
    group, which included families of patients on the ward and their
    healthcare workers, that Mr. Xue’s mother, though asymptomatic,
    was infected along with 18 other patients. The doctor said he
    needed the families’ permission to transfer their infected relatives
    to a facility 50 kilometers away called Zhoupu Hospital. Most nurses
    in the ward had been infected and he was the only doctor remaining,
    he said. Mr. Xue and the other infected patients’ relatives refused, fearing the move would be too disruptive.

    On March 29, Mr. Xue received a message saying that residents
    had already been transferred, on orders from the Chinese CDC, which Donghai’s managers had to obey. “Why the heck did they ask us to
    seek approval?” the doctor wrote in the Ward 24 WeChat group.

    Family members found messages on Chinese social media about Donghai
    residents suffering after the move to Zhoupu, according to the Ward 24
    chat records. Some said they couldn’t get in touch with their parents,
    and others warned the patients wouldn’t survive the chaos. A nurse
    shared in the Ward 24 chat group a hospital notice that said other
    Donghai residents who had been forced to stay in a makeshift space
    in Zhoupu’s entrance hall would soon be moved into a residential ward. “The condition is no comparison to Donghai, but at least there’s progress,” the notice said. “Every hospital is now a mess,” the
    nurse wrote. Mr. Xue said his mother didn’t reply when he tried to
    reach her on WeChat. He worried about whether she had brought her
    hearing aid to the new hospital, imagining her fear without it. He
    tried telephoning different wards but couldn’t find her.

    On March 30, a nurse picked up the phone. She was in the ward where
    his mother had been sent but said she had died the previous night.
    Zhoupu formally notified Mr. Xue of his mother’s death on April 1.
    He said he was told it wasn’t related to Covid because there were
    no symptoms in her lungs. When the person said she might have died
    from sudden heart failure or maybe a stroke, Mr. Xue found it hard
    to believe based on her previous health, and demanded an autopsy.
    Both Zhoupu and Donghai said it wasn’t possible during the outbreak,
    he said. Zhoupu declined to comment.

    By then, the chat group for Ward 24 relatives was boiling with anger.
    A daughter learned her mother suddenly needed a feeding tube after
    being transferred to Zhoupu, and demanded to know why. Several chat
    group members said that after the transfer, nobody gave their parents medications they needed to control high blood pressure or diabetes.
    In a series of exchanges in the Ward 24 chat group, a nurse said
    Donghai needed medical assistance from the outside world. “Otherwise
    we’ll all die,” she wrote. Another nurse suggested an appeal to the central government via a government-run opinion collection website.
    “Both the medical workers and the patients are victims,” she said.
    Back in Donghai hospital’s Ward 24, around 40 patients remained. One
    nurse was left to care for all of them. Two days after the evacuation,
    on March 31, a team of doctors, nurses and orderlies came to aid the
    ward. Three weeks after his mother’s death, Mr. Xue said Donghai still hasn’t provided him details of her final hours. He questioned whether
    she received proper care during the transfer. “It was Donghai’s responsibility to keep her safe, even if the pressure came from the
    state,” he said.

    https://www.wsj.com/articles/shanghai-nursing-home-covid-deaths-11650641053

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