Marty Kampa, Lisa Miller, Bill Gordon, Ken Plant and Scott Berndt have all volunteered their time to provide personalized blankets to more than 3 dozen Veterans now living in nursing homes and assisted living communities in January and February 2020. Lisa Miller heads up the MN Anoka Chapter 39’s blanket presentation program which is planned to continue throughout DAV’s Centennial Celebration challenging us all (individuals, companies, schools, clubs, our chapters and members, as well as our fellow organizations) to conduct 100 Acts of Honor in the name of veterans. #100ActsOfHonor
VA suspends visitation to nursing homes, spinal cord centers
amid spread of coronavirus…The Department of Veterans Affairs has banned
virtually all visitors from its nursing homes and spinal cord injury centers to
protect its most vulnerable patients as coronavirus cases increase across the
country.
“While the [coronavirus] risk to average Americans remains
low, these common-sense measures will help protect some of our most vulnerable
patients,” VA Secretary Robert Wilkie said Tuesday in a statement. “VA will
make every effort to minimize the impact of these policies on veterans while
putting patient safety first.”
The VA announced all of its 134 nursing homes, which are
home to more than 41,000 veterans, adopted a “no visitor” stance, meaning no
outside visitors are permitted to see patients, according to the department.
The only exception will be when veterans are in the last stages of life, at
which time visitors will be limited to the patient’s room.
VA’s 24 major spinal cord injury and disorder centers serve
24,000 veterans, whom the agency considers vulnerable to infection. These
centers also are barring visitors but will have the same exception in the case
of the veteran approaching the end of his or her life. All spinal facilities
will avoid inpatient admittance for routine care and exams and will be
directing those patients to outpatient care.
VA has the largest health care network in the country,
tasked with caring for more than 9 million service members and veterans. Dozens
of VA hospitals from across the country have been cracking down on visitations
to quell the threat of a coronavirus outbreak in the department’s facilities.
More than half of VA patients are older than 65, which is an especially
vulnerable population to the disease.
The department has at least six coronavirus patients in its
care, with five of them waiting for official confirmation, a VA official said
Tuesday.
The single confirmed case is being treated as a patient at
the VA in Palo Alto, Calif. Two others who tested positive but have not been
confirmed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are at the VA
Southern Nevada Health Care System in Las Vegas and the Southeast Louisiana
Veterans Health Care System in New Orleans.
The remaining three patients are quarantined at home after
testing positive at the VA Puget Sound Health Care System in Seattle, the Rocky
Mountain Regional VA Medical Center in Denver and the VA Portland Health Care
System in Oregon.
The number of cases of the virus in the United States now
stands at 761 with 27 deaths, according to the John Hopkins Coronavirus
Resource Center. The VA urges veterans who think they are infected to call
their health care provider before showing up at a hospital.