Madeline Smith, Sarah Jen, & Mijin Jeong

Titles: Weight of the World & I Want Them to Know

Topic: COVID-19 and Skilled Nursing Facilities

COVID-19 rapidly changed skilled nursing facilities (SNFs) around the world as they encountered new challenges and constantly adapted their rules and regulations. In the spring of 2020, we surveyed and interviewed SNF administrators intending to capture their experiences during the pandemic. The data we collected was evocative and perfectly captured some of the many devastating impacts of COVID-19. Because of the poignant nature of their stories, we compiled our findings into two found poems, which used the participant's own words as the source material. In the first poem, Weight of the World, the administrators describe the overwhelming responsibility placed on them to maintain the safety and wellbeing of their residents experiencing the profound loneliness of quarantine. The second poem, I Want Them to Know, details the resiliency of administrators and staff as they respond to the unpredictable challenges COVID-19 posed. The two poems create a complementary narrative describing both the pain and resiliency of administrators, staff, and residents during the pandemic.

Weight of the World

Madeline Smith

There's so much you can do

as an administrator

 

It's everything

you wear so many hats

it's leading

it's service

you can't predict

what is going to get thrown at you

coordinating it all

making sure each part is working correctly

 

Connecting with your staff

to build them up

empowering them to step up

because that's what they came to do

 

I’m the last defense

keeping us in good standing

it can be a very draining

very exhausting job

 

We shut our doors to visitors on March 13th

and so, life as we knew it changed

that was the first thing we had to get past

is this real?

I remember sometime in April

they told us we might still be doing this in November

we all just laughed

it seemed inconceivable to us

 

I can't imagine

going back to the places I've been

to the friends I've had

trying to explain what I've been through

 

My greatest fear

is that I get COVID in the building

and we didn't do infection control right

if we didn't do this right

it's negligence

was it criminal negligence?

are they going to hold me responsible?

am I going to prison

because we had a COVID outbreak?

 

To stop a pandemic, it's impossible

 

It spread like spider webs all over the facility

at one point

we were way more optimistic than we are now

we are the fail-safe

when things fail for at-home care

we're all there is

 

There was a point

we were just concerned about keeping people alive

we saw so many changes in residents

that were honestly alarming

 

Is it ever going to end?

 

It's been an eye opener

to see what isolation does to people

sometimes they will attribute a death

to COVID

because of the depression from isolation

 

You explain it's for their protection

but it's not living

everyone is weary

and fatigue is setting in

 

"Why is this happening to me?”

"I can't breathe with it on.”

“I don't want to be in my room.”

“I want to see people.”

 

I'm not going to lie

sometimes I've looked the other way

when a couple residents get closer than six feet

 

We have some residents

if somebody gets upset they say

"We still have to follow the rules.”

“They're trying their best.”

“Let's just make the best out of it."

 

I don't think they can take another quarantine

 

Yes, they can visit through a closed window

they can call on the phone

they can send letters or cards

but it's not the same as human touch

and it's not the same as having somebody

right there with you

 

it's not being able to see

and feel their family

they're at the end of life

what if they didn't get to say goodbye?

 

It's hard not to feel personally responsible

for the people that didn't make it

how many people are we going to lose

before it is all over?

 

We have done everything asked of us

have stretched to the point of breaking

and we still managed to keep our residents and staff healthy

 

Our residents and staff are resilient

you don't know how to thank

people who put their lives at risk

I try to always have a smile on my face

I know everybody's not having the experience we did

 

People say,

"You don't have the weight of the world on your shoulders"

but in this instance

I do.

I WANT THEM TO KNOW

MIJIN JEONG

The outbreak was emotionally & physically overwhelming

but it actually made staff into a stronger team

I'm part of a team and I'm not out here by myself

 

people reached out

"How can we help?"

 

they made masks

sent cards

brought food for the staff

sponsored events

donated money

 

The Cares Act was a surprise

the government was open

to sign off on things

to make change

review policies

gave us everything we needed supply-wise

like the stimulus

most people have $62 a month to spend

suddenly all of them have got $1,350 in a bank account

one man hadn't had anything new for years

now he walks around in suits and ties all day

and feels like a million bucks

 

It has made us more aware

of how much residents need contact

even if it's not with their family

even if it's with us

because we kind of had to fill the role

of parent, and friend, and child

we really have gotten to know more about them

as people

and so that's a positive for me

maybe we wouldn't learn those things

had COVID not come

we wouldn't have had time

 

The media tends to make things

sound a whole lot worse than they actually are

you never see stories about

nursing homes doing good things

It's always about the negative

about the abuse cases

about the infection cases

the exaggerated or jaded news

unfortunately

poor media gives nursing homes a bad name

this issue has changed

from a health-related concern

to a political nightmare

I wish it could be seen as the health issue it is.

 

I want the media to show the good things

like the nursing homes that have been through all of this since March

and still don't have a case in the building

where are the stories highlighting the facilities

that have done everything that has been asked of them

have been stretched to the point of breaking

have still managed

to keep all of their residents and staff healthy?

 

I wish that people really knew

how the staff loved the residents

I want them to know.

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