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Brookdale Oak Park senior living facility, 1111 Ontario St. in downtown Oak Park.
Steve Schering / Pioneer Press
Brookdale Oak Park senior living facility, 1111 Ontario St. in downtown Oak Park.
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Jenny Lynn Raffe said the isolation her mother, Virginia Haumann, experienced last year in a nursing home was so upsetting it prompted the Elmwood Park woman to remove her mother from the home.

“Every time I saw my mom on Zoom, she was in bed,” Raffe said. “Many times she looked horrible, just gray and horribly bloated and laying in bed — like she was laying in a coffin.”

Raffe was forced into video visits, and her mother was mostly confined to her room, because of restrictions put in place to protect the elderly from the COVID-19 pandemic, which has had a severe impact on senior living facilities. So far, it has infected more than 67,400 residents and claimed the lives of more than 8,600 across the state, according to the Illinois Department of Public Health.

But lockdowns, aimed at containing the virus and stopping the spread, have resulted in isolation, and sometimes depression, among residents and a separation between family members. Residents are hoping the effects will not be long-lasting now that COVID-19 vaccines are becoming available.

Worries about dying alone

Virginia Haumann, 78, has dementia and became a resident of Ascension Living Resurrection Place in Park Ridge, formerly Presence Resurrection Nursing and Rehabilitation, because she needed extended care after a hernia surgery, her daughter said. She had previously resided in an assisted living facility.

Raffe said she was unable to visit with her mother in person at Ascension Living from March until mid-summer. Prior to the lockdown, her mother appeared to be doing well and “feeling better” following her surgery, Raffe said.

But then family visits came to an abrupt end.

“It was horrible,” Raffe recalled. “I couldn’t sleep. I thought, ‘What if she were to die?’ For her to pass away without the family members there is just the cruelest thing ever.”

When lock-down restrictions were lifted, it was not the happy reunion Raffe had hoped for.

“When we were finally able to come and see her in July, I nearly lost it because on that July day, she looked horrible,” Raffe said of her mother. “She looked so scrawny, her face was shrunken in and she was very upset. She said, ‘They are leaving me here to rot.'”

The following month, Raffe said she moved her mother out of the facility and into her Elmwood Park home, where she is cared for by home health care workers and receives physical and occupational therapy.

“Since she’s been home, she’s definitely come around,” Raffe said last month. “She’s much more relaxed as far as understanding that she’s not left alone anymore, that’s there’s somebody there, which is me or the caregiver.”

Molly Gaus, spokeswoman for Ascension Living, said the company is following U.S. Centers for Disease Control, state and local visitation restrictions that are “designed to protect our residents, associates and families.”

“Our team is helping our residents and families stay connected in many different ways, including through virtual visits, closed window meetings, distribution of notes that come in via mail and our online note delivery service, as well as via photos and videos posted to our Facebook page,” she said. “Our creative, talented team of associates has gone to great lengths since March to provide joy and support during this most unbelievable time.”

Oak Park Arms: visits as short as two minutes

During a recent visit to the Oak Park Arms retirement community, Stephanie Schrodt wore her face shield, face mask and brought her laptop, all part of the new normal when visiting her mother.

Schrodt and her mother, Lynas Waun, were able to meet inside the building’s lobby, where they sat six- feet apart, and went online clothes shopping.

“Our visits can be as short as two minutes where I deliver something such as food…,” Schrodt said. “Once in a while, we meet in-person in a room that is designated for us or in the lobby when others are not present. These visits last under an hour.”

Insider her room, Waun is checked on every two hours by staff, and her family has been in regular contact since the pandemic began this spring.

Lynas Waun, a resident of the Oak Park Arms, visits with her daughter Stephanie Schrodt at the retirement community located at 408 S. Oak Park Ave.
- Original Credit: Handout
Lynas Waun, a resident of the Oak Park Arms, visits with her daughter Stephanie Schrodt at the retirement community located at 408 S. Oak Park Ave.
– Original Credit: Handout

“In the beginning, my siblings and I were concerned about the amount of time she was spending in her room, but we also understand this was essential for everyone’s safety,” Schrodt said. “My siblings and I increased phone calls to her and Oak Park Arms started handing out activity sheets.”

Recently, Oak Park Arms residents have also been able to dine at a distance inside the dining room, while limited in-person activities have resumed.

Waun said the staff has been engaged with residents.

“I enjoy a weekly music program,” Waun said. “I feel residents have respected the limitations in programming and family visitations. They are very committed to cleaning protocols to keep the residents safe.”

Brookdale: ‘We cannot have visitors’

At Brookdale Oak Park, 1111 Ontario St., residents have spent a majority of the year eating meals inside their rooms as the 13th floor dining room was closed to allow for social distancing.

Resident Galen Gockel, 88, said he fills our out a menu each day to make his choices for the next day’s meals, which are brought directly to his apartment door.

Brookdale residents have also been asked to no longer go shopping at nearby Trader Joe’s or Walgreens, with many having food dropped off by family and friends.

Brookdale Oak Park senior living facility, 1111 Ontario St. in downtown Oak Park.
Brookdale Oak Park senior living facility, 1111 Ontario St. in downtown Oak Park.

“My daughter lives in Wisconsin and our grandson lives in Brookfield, so they drop off some food in our vestibule and staff is very good at telling me when it’s here,” Gockel said. “In the vestibule, they have one table for drop-offs and another for pickups. We cannot have visitors. That’s firm.”

Residents are able to walk around the building, and limited activities have resumed, though attendance is limited. Brookdale also allows a barber to come into the building twice a week.

“We have a big sign-up every Saturday where we can sign up for an activity,” Gockel said. “By and large, I would say the overwhelming attitude is the people in the building understand exactly what’s going on. They understand if they’re not careful, they can end up being a carrier and possibly infect somebody else. I haven’t heard much complaining.”

Brookdale’s location does allow residents, when weather allows, to walk at nearby Austin Gardens.

While many have accepted the new rules and restrictions, Gockel says there are likely some who are having a hard time adjusting to spending a majority of their time inside their rooms.

It is true that we don’t see each other nearly as much as we used to. That’s no surprise and for some people that’s a downer,” he said. “I think there are some people who really regret being alone.”

Norridge area: ‘You can’t hold their hand’

Roberta Pack, 85, said she promised her husband Robert Pack, 95, that she’d always be with him and he wouldn’t have to go to a nursing home. And she tried, for a long time, to stick to that promise, even when his Alzheimer’s became so advanced that he would get lost in their own home, or leave at 2 a.m. and have to be brought back by neighbors or police.

After her husband fell three or four times, once sustaining a brain bleed, doctors told Pack that she needed to put her husband in a memory care facility. In November, Pack brought her husband to Norwood Crossing, an assisted living facility near Norridge on the Northwest Side of Chicago.

But with rising cases of COVID-19 in the area, Pack’s first visit had to be canceled. No “medically unnecessary” visitors are allowed inside Norwood Crossing, according to its website, though it is now allowing outdoor visitors with restrictions.

“I haven’t been able to see him. I think that’s probably the hardest part,” Pack said in a December interview. “Because you can’t hold their hand or anything. And even if he doesn’t know who I am, at least he’d know somebody was there.”

The couple doesn’t have kids, and this is the first time she’s living without him.

“We’ve been married for 54 years, and this is really the first time he’s just been away where I knew he wasn’t going to come home,” Pack said.

She’s seen her husband through an iPad video chat, but he doesn’t “have the concept” of looking at the screen, and doesn’t know where he is, but she said, adding that he seems OK.

Pack can see that he’s getting hair cuts and shaves, and that he’s clean and changing his clothes. Norwood Crossing is doing a “beautiful job,” she said.

Still, it’s difficult to be without her husband. She talks to her friends on the phone, and tries to clean and straighten the house, keeping busy when she feels emotional.

“I don’t think it ever gets easier, no matter how you lose your soul mate,” Pack said.