In the middle of the night, Stefania Silvestri lies in bed remembering her elderly patientsâ cries.
âHelp me.â
âPlease donât leave me.â
âI need my family.â
Months of caring for older adults in a Rhode Island nursing home ravaged by COVID-19 have taken a steep toll on Silvestri, 37, a registered nurse.
She canât sleep, as she replays memories of residents who became ill and died. Sheâs gained 45 pounds. âI have anxiety. Some days I donât want to get out of bed,â she said.
Now, as the coronavirus surges around the country, Silvestri and hundreds of thousands of workers in nursing homes and assisted living centers are watching with a sense of dread.
Many of these workers struggle with grief over the suffering theyâve witnessed, both at work and in their communities. Some, like Silvestri, have been infected with the coronavirus and recovered physically â but not emotionally.
Since the start of the pandemic, more than 616,000 residents and employees at long-term care facilities have been struck by COVID-19, according to the from KFF. Just over 91,000 have died as the coronavirus has invaded nearly 23,000 facilities. (KHN is an editorially independent program of KFF.)
At least 1,000 of those deaths represent certified nursing assistants, nurses and other people who work in institutions that care for older adults, according to a recent analysis of government data by Harold Pollack, a professor at the School of Social Service Administration at the University of Chicago. This is almost certainly an undercount, he said, because of incomplete data reporting.
How are long-term care workers affected by the losses theyâre experiencing, including the deaths of colleagues and residents theyâve cared for, often for many years?
Edwina Gobewoe, a certified nursing assistant who has worked at Charlesgate Nursing Center in Providence, Rhode Island, for nearly 20 years, acknowledged âitâs been overwhelming for me, personally.â
At least at Charlesgate from April to June, many of them suddenly. âOne day, we hear our resident has breathing problems, needs oxygen, and then a few days later they pass,â she said. âFamilies couldnât come in. We were the only people with them, holding their hands. It made me very, very sad.â
Every morning, Gobewoe would pray with a close friend at work. âWe asked the Lord to give us strength so we could take care of these people who needed us so much.â When that colleague was struck by COVID-19 in the spring, Gobewoe prayed for her recovery and was glad when she returned to work several weeks later.
But sorrow followed in early September: Gobewoeâs friend collapsed and died at home while complaining of unusual chest pain. Gobewoe was told that her death was caused by blood clots, which can be a dangerous complication of COVID-19.
She would âdo anything for any resident,â Gobewoe remembered, sobbing. âItâs too much, something you canât even talk about,â describing her grief.
I first spoke to Kim Sangrey, 52, of Lancaster, Pennsylvania, in July. She was distraught over the deaths of 36 residents in March and April at the nursing home where sheâs worked for several decades â most of them due to COVID-19 and related complications. Sangrey, a recreational therapist, asked me not to name the home, where she continues to be employed.
âYou know residents like family â their likes and dislikes, the food they prefer, their families, their grandchildren,â she explained. âThey depend on us for everything.â
When COVID-19 hit, âit was horrible,â she said. âYouâd go into residentsâ rooms and they couldnât breathe. Their families wanted to see them, and weâd set up Zoom wearing full gear, head to toe. Tears are flowing under your mask as you watch this person that you loved dying â and the family mourning their death through a tablet.â
âIt was completely devastating. It runs through your memory â you think about it all the time.â
Mostly, Sangrey said, she felt empty and exhausted. âYou feel like this is never going to end â you feel defeated. But you have to continue moving forward,â she told me.
Three months later, when we spoke again, COVID-19 cases were rising in Pennsylvania but Sangrey sounded resolute. Sheâd had six sessions with a grief counselor and said it had become clear that âmy purpose at this point is to take every ounce of strength I have and move through this second wave of COVID.â
âAs human beings, it is our duty to be there for each other,â she continued. âYou say to yourself, OK, I got through this last time, I can get through it again.â
That doesnât mean that fear is absent. âAll of us know COVID-19 is coming. Every day we say, âIs today the day it will come back? Is today the day Iâll find out I have it?â It never leaves you.â
To this day, Silvestri feels horrified when she thinks about the end of March and early April at Greenville Center in Rhode Island, where up to 79 residents became ill with COVID-19 and at least 20 have died.
The coronavirus moved through the facility like wildfire. âYouâre putting one patient on oxygen and the patient in the next room is on the floor but you canât go to them yet,â Silvestri remembered. âAnd the patient down the hall has a fever of 103 and theyâre screaming, âHelp me, help me.â But you canât go to him either.â
âI left work every day crying. It was heartbreaking â and I felt I couldnât do enough to save them.â
Then, there were the body bags. âYou put this person who feels like family in a plastic body bag and wheel them out on a frame with wheels through the facility, by other residentsâ rooms,â said Silvestri, who canât smell certain kinds of plastic without reliving these memories. âThinking back on it makes me feel physically ill.â
Silvestri, who has three children, developed a relatively mild case of COVID-19 in late April and returned to work several weeks later. Her husband, Michael, also became ill and lost his job as a truck driver. After several months of being unemployed, heâs now working at a construction site.
Since July 1, the family has gone without health insurance, âso Iâm not able to get counseling to deal with the emotional side of whatâs happened,â Silvestri said.
Although her nursing home set up a hotline number that employees could call, that doesnât appeal to her. âBeing on the phone with someone you donât know, that doesnât do it for me,â she said. âWe definitely need more emotional support for health care workers.â
What does help is family. âIâve leaned on my husband a lot and heâs been there for me,â Silvestri said. âAnd the children are OK. Iâm grateful for what I have â but Iâm really worried about what lies ahead.â
The Navigating Aging column last week focused on how nursing homes respond to grief sweeping through their facilities.
Join Judith Graham for a Facebook Live event on grief and bereavement during the coronavirus pandemic on Monday, Nov. 16, at 1 p.m. ET. You can watch the conversation  and submit questions in advance here.
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