Fears sparked over aged care residents ‘giving up’ from COVID-19 isolation

·

Fears have been sparked by nurses sent in to help Melbourne’s coronavirus-ravaged aged care facilities who claim that aged care residents are on the verge of giving up due to COVID-19 isolation procedures.

Speaking on ABC 7:30 Tuesday night, Western Health Clinical Nursing Consultant Shane Durance said he fears there will be a long tail of ongoing deaths in nursing homes due to the pandemic, unrelated to COVID-19 infections.

“We’ve got people who aren’t COVID-positive, whose mood is severely depressed, who are not eating well, who are not drinking adequately, who are prominently locked in their rooms, not able to go out for any activities, no leisure activities, and their mobility is declining and their mood is declining,” he told 7.30.

Photo: WANDERLUSTER VIA GETTY IMAGES

“And for someone who’s already elderly, already has a mood disorder, already is mildly malnourished — it’s very hard to come back from that.”

Mr Durance says aside from the devastating effects of the virus, isolation is bringing even more detrimental effects to patients mental and physical wellbeing.

“It affects their mood. It affects their desire to eat, their desire to drink,” he said.

“They go to bed, they stop walking, progressively they lose the ability to walk.

READ MORE: Victoria’s Greek community in tears – 16 deaths at St Basil’s, 22 Greek lives mourned
READ MORE: Victoria’s deadliest day: 21 Covid deaths, 16 of those linked to aged care

“My concern is that, although the death rates in residential care patients will start to slow, then we’ll see a very long tail of ongoing death rates.

“And they won’t be attributed to COVID and they’ll drop off the front page of the newspapers.”

Mr Durance said he feared governments and the broader public would lose sight of the issue and would fail to properly review what went wrong.

Mary-Louise McLaws from the World Health Organisation’s Experts Advisory Panel predicted that a quarter of Victorian aged care cases will die from COVID-19. The health expert says the public should remain vigilant, as the aged-care death toll is likely rise. 

“It will continue sadly because Victoria has had a very large number of aged care cases and I expect at least a quarter of them to die,” she said.

Advertisement

Share:

KEEP UP TO DATE WITH TGH

By subscribing you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.

Advertisement

Latest News

Everything Greeks abroad must know about registering land in Greece by November 30

Tension is mounting among the Greek diaspora in Australia as the final deadline of November 30 looms to register property.

Historical novel ‘Bound to Two Homelands’ launched in Melbourne and Canberra

Associate Professor Con Aroney's historical novel 'Bound to Two Homelands' launched in Melbourne and Canberra.

Giannis Antetokounmpo co-produces film set on Mykonos island

The Greek basketball superstar, already known for his ventures in energy drinks, wineries, is now adding cinema to his business repertoire.

Mystery of the 300 million euro home listed for sale near the Acropolis

A single-family home on Dionysiou Aeropagitou street, directly across from the Acropolis had been listed setting a new record.

The Economist predicts return of Parthenon Marbles to Greece by 2025

The long-standing dispute over the Parthenon sculptures, also known as thee Elgin Marbles, may see significant progress.

You May Also Like

Greek authorities begin moving migrants into new camp on Samos island

Greek authorities have begun moving asylum-seekers living in a squalid camp on the island of Samos into a new facility.

Georgia Pandelios on preventing childhood allergies in pregnancy and beyond

Food allergy is a serious medical condition that is life-long, but what if we could prevent our children from getting them?

Tassos Evgeniou: The Greek Australian who has collected hundreds of signed football jerseys

Greek Australian Tassos Evgeniou has collected not one, not two, not three, but over 400 jerseys and autographs and it doesn't stop there.