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Caregiver had no symptoms for 3 days before returning to Spokane Veterans Home, official says

CHAD SOKOL | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 4 years, 7 months AGO
by CHAD SOKOL
Daily Inter Lake | March 30, 2020 5:00 PM

A health care worker who has tested positive for COVID-19 had no symptoms for three days before returning to work at the Spokane Veterans Home last week, a state official said.

In an email, Heidi Audette, a spokeswoman for the Washington Department of Veterans Affairs, said the employee “had minimal direct contact with residents” while working on Friday and Monday, when the positive test result came back.

The department runs the Spokane Veterans Home, a 100-bed nursing facility at 222 E. Fifth Ave.

Audette declined to give the gender or age of the infected employee, who is now self-quarantined at home. She said the employee developed symptoms of COVID-19 on March 20 and got tested on March 23, “the last day symptoms were present.”

Audette said the employee was allowed to return to work in accordance with guidelines from the state Department of Health, which are based on guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“The facility focused on their knowledge that the individual had no known exposure to an individual who had tested positive, symptoms had been resolved for 72 hours, and seven days had passed since symptoms first appeared,” Audette said.

Those same guidelines say a health care worker who returns to work after a COVID-19 diagnosis should wear a face mask “at all times while in the health care facility, if there is a sufficient supply of face masks, until all symptoms are completely resolved or until 14 days after illness onset, whichever is longer.”

Audette said the Spokane Veterans Home employee was not required to wear a face mask on Friday and Monday. Starting Tuesday, however, all staff members must wear masks when tending to residents for 14 days.

The facility is taking other precautions. Audette said residents are being checked for fevers and other symptoms every four hours, and staff members are expected to check their own temperatures twice a day. Staff members also are screened for symptoms at the start of each shift.

Residents’ families were not notified that an employee had been tested for COVID-19 until the positive result was announced Monday evening.

The Washington Department of Veterans Affairs sent a letter to family members on March 24 stating, “As of today, we have no cases of COVID-19 in any of our Veterans Homes.”

That was one day after the employee was tested, but nearly a week before the positive result came back.

Under a new department policy, sickened employees will need to have a negative COVID-19 test result, a doctor’s note or approval from local health officials in order to return to work.

Mary Rorie said she worries about the health of her 94-year-old father, Willie Rorie, a Navy veteran who has lived at the Spokane Veterans Center for nearly a year.

Marie Rorie expressed frustration that the infected employee was allowed to return to work, but she applauded the facility’s caregivers, who have arranged for her to speak with her father by video chat almost daily for about two weeks, since Gov. Jay Inslee barred in-person visits at residential care centers.

“They go out of their way to accommodate me with FaceTime,” she said. “For a year solid, they’ve been great. They’ve taken care of my dad in a great way.”

The Washington Department of Veterans Affairs is separate from the federal agency of the same name, which runs the Mann-Grandstaff VA Medical Center in northwest Spokane.

An outbreak of COVID-19 at a nursing home could be disastrous as seniors are more likely to die from the disease. Since late February, more than 80 residents have been infected and 35 have died at the Life Care Center in Kirkland, Washington.

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