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Advocates say lengthy COVID isolation for seniors in care may do more harm than good

Authorities asked to reconsider guidelines as to when residents must isolate
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A health-care worker looks out of a window at Maison Herron, a long-term care home in the Montreal suburb of Dorval, on Saturday, April 11, 2020. The physical and mental health impacts of isolation periods are high for seniors living in care facilities.THE CANADIAN PRESS/Graham Hughes

After 10 days of preventive COVID-19 isolation in her room at a Montreal care facility, Joanne Béland’s 84-year-old mother has more difficulty moving and expressing herself.

“My mother, she told me, ’I don’t know if I’ll still be able to walk when I’ve finished my 10 days,’” Béland said in a recent interview, adding that her mother now struggles to get out of a chair.

“It’s very difficult for them to maintain their mobility when they’re confined in a room for 10 days.”

Béland’s mother, Lorraine, lives at the Ressource de la Montagne, an “intermediate” care facility in Montreal, which offers a higher level of care than a seniors residence but less than a traditional long-term care home.

Like in other residential care facilities in the province, residents are required to isolate for 10 days if a worker or another resident on their floor tests positive for COVID-19.

Béland, who chairs a committee representing residents at her mother’s facility, said she agrees COVID-19-positive residents should isolate. But she says she worries a 10-day isolation period for others on their floor causes more harm than good.

Earlier this week, the users committee at the health authority in west-central Montreal, which runs the facility where Béland’s mother lives, sent a letter to Quebec’s health minister and the seniors minister, calling for the isolation period to be shortened. With high vaccination rates in residential care facilities, and evidence that the Omicron variant causes less serious illness, the physical and mental health impacts of the isolation period are too high, the letter said.

“The majority of seniors, they’ve already had their third dose of vaccine, they’re well-vaccinated,” Béland said. “It doesn’t make sense to keep them in this condition, to confine them in their rooms for 10 days.”

Béland said she doesn’t think residents who may have been exposed to COVID-19 should be free to move anywhere, but she said residents should at least be able to move around their floors — especially if they test negative.

Her mother tested negative twice for COVID-19 during her 10-day preventive isolation, Béland said. “After two negative tests, it seems to me we could give them the chance to leave their rooms.”

For doctors who work with elderly patients, whether to reduce the preventive isolation period is a difficult question.

Dr. Sophie Zhang, co-president of an organization that represents doctors who work in long-term care facilities, said that while Omicron may be less serious than other mutations like Delta, it can lead to severe illness and death, especially among elderly people who are already sick.

“The question is, yes, whether preventive measures are worse than the actual infection,” she said in a recent interview. “It’s kind of tough to answer and I think it becomes kind of an ethical question, rather than a scientific question.”

Zhang, who oversees 15 long-term care centres in south-central Montreal, said measures like the isolation period may have to be rethought because of the widespread transmission of COVID-19 in the community.

At one facility where she works, an outbreak was declared on Dec. 19 and has not yet ended, as new cases continue to be reported among staff members.

“Once there’s an outbreak, we put in place a lot of measures — restrictive measures — on visits, on activities, on mobility within the facility,” she said. “So all that is taking a heavy toll on our patients’ quality of life.”

For people who are older and sicker, not moving or moving less can cause loss of muscle mass even after a few days, she said. Reducing the isolation period, implementing more aggressive testing and changing the way outbreaks are defined all need to be considered, Zhang added.

Dr. Quoc Dinh Nguyen, a geriatrician and epidemiologist at the Centre hospitalier de l’Université de Montréal, said that especially in larger facilities, residents can have their 10-day isolation periods reset when new cases are reported on their floors.

Nguyen said in a recent interview that testing could be used to lift isolation periods sooner. Facilities, he added, could also take into account their specific risk levels and the ability of residents to follow measures. A regional approach may make more sense than a provincewide isolation policy, he added.

“We need to worry about the adverse effects of isolation measures,” Nguyen said, adding that he also worries about the impact of relaxing measures too much.

“Although I agree that it’s not as severe as it used to be, it’s still severe,” he said about the Omicron variant. “We still need to be careful and we still need to put measures to reduce transmission.”

—Jacob Serebrin, The Canadian Press

RELATED: B.C. CDC updates COVID isolation time back up to 10 days for unvaccinated adults