Home International Drive-through UK care home visits for socially distant times

Drive-through UK care home visits for socially distant times

424
0

BANBURY, UK: The cars snaking past the bunting-adorned entrance of a British care home point to an era when even cherished family visits have to be socially distant because of the coronavirus.

Gracewell of Adderbury home for the elderly, in central England, is trying out drive-through family visits to protect its vulnerable residents from the omnipresent dangers of the new disease.

Advertisement

Advertisement

The anxious visitors sit in their cars, smiling encouragingly at their loved ones, while the elderly, some of them in their 90s, relax in comfy armchairs in the small driveway, soaking up the warm spring sun.

Drive-through family visits at a British care home are protecting its vulnerable residents from coronavirus. (Photo: AFP/Adrian Dennis)

They try to chat a little at a safe distance, making the best of a trying time in which families have been forced to live apart for over two months while the government tries to stamp out a virus that has officially claimed around 38,000 lives – second only to the United States.

"Emotional, yeah, very emotional. I just wanted to hug them," said Helen Hughes, daughter of one of the residents.

Advertisement

Advertisement

How difficult was it to resist that urge to reach out and hug?

"Huge. Huge," Hughes said.

"I just want to hug them because they don't understand what's going on," she said, trying to smile through the pain of being forcibly apart from her mother.

"HELLO MY LOVELY"

Care homes have been ravaged by the virus across Europe.

The British government said on Friday (May 29) that 6,182 – or 39.8 per cent – of the ones in England currently had "a suspected outbreak of symptomatic or confirmed coronavirus".

Britain's Office of National Statistics (ONS) has counted around 13,500 care home deaths attributed to COVID-19 in Britain, although the real number could be higher because not all of those who pass away get tested first.

The ONS has counted more than 46,000 total fatalities in the UK "involving" the virus as of mid-May.

Gracewell manager Arlene Acuavera said her home has been thankfully spared by the disease.

"We are very, very fortunate and lucky that we haven't had any residents or staff that are positive with COVID-19," she said with evident relief.

"We are maintaining that through our infection control management," the manager said of the drive-through visits.

"We are just fortunate and we keep on praying that it will continue until the end."

Britain is now easing its way out of lockdown, although the four countries – England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland – are each taking slightly different approacRead More – Source

[contf] [contfnew]

channel news asia

[contfnewc] [contfnewc]

Previous articleTrump clarifies Twitter ‘shooting’ comment over riots in Minneapolis
Next articleChina reports four new coronavirus cases, compared to none day before