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This virus has added an additional burden to all of us who are caregiving for elderly loved ones - as if we needed one more thing to have to stress over!

I would think that professionals who work in a nursing home are very vigilant about maintaining proper hygiene to stem the spread of illness - don't forget, these are people who deal with flu outbreaks every year!! - since they 1) don't want to spread any illness to the people in their care and 2) they don't want to bring home any illnesses to their own families.

That being said, you have to do what you feel is best for your mom's overall health. But I don't know, if at this stage of the virus, that non-nursing home employed people are at less risk to carry/spread the illness than those working in a nursing home. If it were my mom, I would likely stay with the help I've already hired, since she knows them, likes them (as much as she is able) and I know they're reliable, trustworthy people.

Again, make the decision that you can best live with. Unfortunately, as so many people have stated in the forum before today, many times care-taking involves not either a good/bad option, but the "best of 2 bad" options.
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momissues Mar 2020
Yes, it is the "best of 2 bad options"! Thank you so very much for your wisdom and support! I send love and support back to you!!
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Countrymouse is right. Not just the caregivers, but anyone coming into the house MUST wash their hand first. Then, take a disinfecting wipe and go back any wipe every surface they touched on the way in....including the faucet and basin.

but, I wonder what your plan is for when a lock down prevents anyone from leaving their home. Voluntary at first. Maybe you might consider a live-in for a short while till this passes. The risks are exposure while you are out, then bringing it in. It is nearly impossible to "screen" because before you have any symptoms...you are infectious.
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needtowashhair Mar 2020
It's more than their hands. If they were around someone infected, it's all over their clothes. They themselves could be infected and not know it yet. So at least have them wear a mask. A mask helps prevent spread.
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On what basis are you employing these people?

What do the caregivers who do not also work in nursing homes do when they are not on duty with your mother?

It is your decision, of course, and unfortunately a very difficult one in the absence of guarantees. But do beware unintended consequences.

Supposing you let them go, the disruption upsets your mother, your mother's behaviour becomes more challenging, and both that and the increased workload lead to your losing the remaining caregivers too (healthy ones are not going to be short of job opportunities if they want them)?

I think you might do better to set aside a washroom for them to use on arrival, if possible, and keep it well-stocked and clean.
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momissues Mar 2020
Thank you so much for pointing out the possible repercussions if I let the nursing home caregivers go -- I would actually term those repercussions more "probable" then possible. Having your objective opinion has been a great help to me!!
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The decision is certainly yours, but more difficult is resigning yourself to making peace with what you decide.

Your mom is 88. You have blessed her with the very best you could during the three years in which you’ve been responsible for her care.

The management techniques for contagion control in our residential care sites are likely to be among the highest our country has ever seen, especially since the elderly have been identified as a population that is particularly vulnerable to this disease.

Given the information you have, ie. the choice between dismissing a staff that was difficult for you to acquire or taking into account the quality of contagion control in the employment sites where your aides work when they are not with your mother, you are pretty much balanced in making either choice.

I’d probably choose to keep the aides you have, and feel comfortable doing so, since your mom could have some risk of exposure with either choice.

You’re a good daughter. Have confidence that you’ll make the best decision you can.
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needtowashhair Mar 2020
"The management techniques for contagion control in our residential care sites are likely to be among the highest our country has ever seen, especially since the elderly have been identified as a population that is particularly vulnerable to this disease."

I wouldn't count on that. There's only so much they can do. Unless they wear a different tyvek suit or change clothes between each patient after every single interaction, then they are spreading the virus. The can wash their hands raw. The microdroplets will be on their clothes. When they go to change someone or lift someone, those microdroplets will be transferred to the patient or their bedding.

You can bet that the NH in Kirkland is doing all that it can with the scrutiny it's getting. Yet the infection ran like wildfire throughout that facility.
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Where I live staff are being screened every day before they are allowed to enter the building, in my opinion they are safer than workers in the community who are not facing that level of scrutiny.
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momissues Mar 2020
Thank you for that!!
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Do whatever makes you more comfortable. This is your decision. What do you feel is best? As far as sanitizers go, all the reports I hear recommend soap and water first, sanitizer in between times if soap and water aren’t available.
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