2B Saturday, May 23, 2020 The Observer & Baker City Herald DEALING WITH GRIEF DURING THE CORONAVIRUS PANDEMIC ‘Everything just feels fake’ By Bettina Boxall Los Angeles Times LOS ANGELES — It’s been seven weeks since Karen Blanks’ brother-in-law died from COVID-19, but his death still doesn’t seem real to her. She and her husband couldn’t visit Scott Blanks in the hospital. They couldn’t view his body at the mortu- ary before he was cremated. They’re not holding a memo- rial service until large gather- ings are permitted. “Everything just feels fake — like I’m in this big, clouded fog, and someone is telling me, ‘Your brother-in-law died,’ ” she said. “It doesn’t feel real because everything has been so different.” The cruel toll of the CO- VID-19 pandemic reaches beyond its victims to hun- dreds of thousands of family members and friends who have been robbed of commu- nal support and time-honored rituals to help them cope with the loss of loved ones. Long after a vaccine has halted the spread of the novel coronavirus, many of the bereaved will struggle with feelings of guilt and prolonged grief over all that they couldn’t do and say in the fi nal days and hours of a relative’s life. Sweeping virus-related restrictions — on bedside visits, funerals, church gather- ings, support-group meetings, air travel and even consoling hugs from caregivers — are affecting not just COVID-19 victims and their survivors but “the way everyone is dying right now and how ev- eryone is grieving,” said Dale Larson, a professor of counsel- ing psychology at Santa Clara University. “You couldn’t design a more impactful set of conditions to disrupt the kind of things we like to see happening to support us in times of loss and grief. It’s just staggering,” he said. “I think the novel corona- virus is creating a novel form of traumatic bereavement for a large number of survivors.” Karen Blanks had known Scott, a 34-year-old dental as- sistant from Whittier, since he was a freshman in high school and she started dating his older brother Quentin. “He was my Scottie. I loved him,” she said. “Not being able to be by his side — for me, it’s almost traumatizing. ... Even after he passed, I wanted to go to the mortuary to see him, thinking that would be OK, and I couldn’t even do that.” The social distancing, shelter-in-place rules and lim- its on hospital visitation that are hallmarks of the global pandemic have deprived people of the most fundamen- tal deathbed connections. They can’t hold a loved one’s hand, sleep next to their hospital bed, comb their hair or shave them. “All of these physical and mammalian kinds of signals and bonding that we share with any other species — all of that caregiving is stripped away,” said Robert Neimeyer, director of the Portland Insti- tute for Loss and Transition. Forgiveness can’t be granted or sought. Years of estrangement can’t end with a deathbed vigil. “We are left holding a bag of a lot of unfi n- ished conversations,” he said. Stacey Silva is haunted by a phone call with her father, Gary Young, a week before he died of complications from COVID-19 in mid-March in a hospital in Gilroy, Calif. Although she had been able Tolga Akmen / AFP-Getty Images-TNS Bathers swim in the Serpentine Lido in Hyde Park, London. Where is it safe to swim? By Christopher Reynolds Los Angeles Times Jason Armond / Los Angeles Times-TNS Gary Blunt, a palliative care coordinator at Providence Cedars-Sinai Tarzana Medi- cal Center, has been “taken aback at times” by the end-of-life scenes wrought by the coronavirus. “You couldn’t design a more impactful set of conditions to disrupt the kind of things we like to see happening to support us in times of loss and grief. It’s just staggering.” — Dale Larson, professor of counseling psychology to see him through a glass partition in the intensive care unit, the hospital had stopped visits. “He called me about 4 o’clock in the morning, and he had an (oxygen mask). It was already hard to talk to my dad and have a conversa- tion because he would start coughing after a couple of words,” Silva said. “I believe he was calling to tell me that they were intubating him. I didn’t understand, and he got frustrated and he hung up. “That’s the last conversa- tion I had with my dad, and I have so much guilt that I couldn’t understand and that I couldn’t tell him that I loved him,” she said through tears. “I think about that every day.” Friends and family are giving her emotional support, “but nothing helps,” Silva said. “Unless you’ve lost a loved one in this particular manner, you really have no idea how this feels.” Limits on the size of public gatherings and air travel are restricting or eliminating ancient rituals of mourning that help the living. Funer- als are small or unattended. Memorial services are being postponed to unknown dates in the future. Families are choosing cremation for rela- tives rather than burial with only a few people present. Virtual ceremonies and gatherings can help fi ll that void, Neimeyer said, if the bereaved are actively involved and not just passive observers. They can share memories and stories on Zoom or arrange a time when people across the country ritually light candles. “Almost anything we do,” he said, “that returns to us a sense of agency, where we can in some measure exercise choice or take action.” The coronavirus has upended the world of pallia- tive care teams — the nurses, doctors, social workers and chaplains whose job it is to support patients and families in times of serious illness and death. Gary Blunt is a palliative care coordinator at Provi- dence Cedars-Sinai Tarzana Medical Center. As a pallia- tive care nurse, he has been present at hundreds of deaths when he could hold a patient’s hand and comfort bereft fam- ily members. But he has been “taken aback at times” by the end- of-life scenes wrought by the coronavirus. The hospital converted a cardiac unit into a COVID-19 ward. Large, zippered sheets of heavy, opaque plastic seal the hallways and the open doors of each patient’s room. A small window of clear plastic provides a view of the bed. No visitors are allowed in the rooms. To limit exposure, even the palliative staff avoids entering, meaning that the patient’s primary contact is with a bedside nurse cloaked in a gown, face shield, mask and gloves. When death is near, the hospital will let one fam- ily member — wearing full protective gear — stand in the hallway and look through the window for a short period of time. Late last month, Blunt’s team tried to prepare a woman for what she would experience if she came for a fi nal glimpse of her dying husband. He was confused and had been restrained so he couldn’t dislodge his oxygen mask and tubes. He would not be able to recognize her, garbed in gown and mask, peering through a small plastic window several feet from the bed. He would not be able to hear her against the hum of the room’s medical equipment. In the end, she decided not to come. Instead, the family asked Blunt to play Neil Dia- mond songs on a Bluetooth speaker in the room and said goodbye on FaceTime. A nurse held an iPad over the man’s face for about 15 minutes while his sobbing wife and son uttered their fi nal endearments. In normal times, medi- cal staff would give a fam- ily privacy in such intimate moments. Witnessing it now can leave nurses with “this horrible guilt of being there, when you know you shouldn’t be there,” Blunt said. “It’s re- ally tough.” He worries about COVID’s lingering emotional impact on caregivers. “These will stick with us uniquely,” Blunt said. “I think a lot of staff are going to be scarred by this pro- cess and have a lot to work through.” Rikki Larson is a clinical social worker at USC Verdugo Hills Hospital in Glendale, which allows short individual visits to patients on the verge of death. But she can no longer con- sole the grieving the way she always has. “I like to be able to hug people and comfort them,” she said. “I’ve left the hospital more times than I can tell with someone else’s tears on my shoulder.” Now she has to keep her distance, at most quickly lay- ing her hand on a shoulder. “It’s very hard — it’s not the same,” Larson said. At hospitals that aren’t on the front lines of the COV- ID-19 battle, visitation limits aren’t as strict. But they can still be wrenching for families. Rachel Rusch, a clinical social worker in palliative care at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles, will not soon forget her conversation with a teenage patient and her mother. The end was near for the girl, who had cardiovascu- lar disease. “The piece that has stayed in my heart,” Rusch said, “was the eyes of her mother across the bedside” as Rusch explained that, because of the COVID-19 pandemic, only a few members of their huge extended family would be al- lowed in the room during her daughter’s fi nal hours. Such experiences have left Rusch thinking of “all the ripple effects that are going to continue in the days and weeks and months and years to come because the end of someone’s story was so altered from anything anyone might have prepared them- selves for,” she said. Wayne Strom entered the Kensington assisted living facility in Redondo Beach in early December after a series of falls made it diffi cult for him to walk. His wife, Kathy, who was staying with her mother in Rancho Palos Verdes, spent every day with him, helping with his physical therapy and eating meals together. That routine came to an abrupt halt on March 12, when the pandemic prompted the Kensington to suspend family visits. Strom switched to calling Wayne several times a day and realized something was amiss in late March when he said he was too tired to talk. He was admitted to the hospital on March 30, tested positive for the coronavirus and died three days later. Strom had not seen her husband of 38 years for three weeks. “I think it’s taken me a while to realize that he’s gone because I wasn’t with him at the end, and we haven’t had a memorial,” she said. She still puts her cellphone by her bed, expecting Wayne to call to say their nightly prayer together. Summer always means water, whether it’s an ocean, lake, river, swimming pool or hot tub. But now that we’re worrying more about germs, it’s natural to won- der: Will this season’s swimming, surfi ng, fl oating and soaking be as safe as it used to be? Yes, many experts say. “There is no data that somebody got infected this way (with coronavirus),” said professor Karin B. Mi- chels, chair of UCLA’s Department of Epidemiology, in a recent interview. “I can’t say it’s absolutely 100% zero risk, but I can tell you that it would never cross my mind to get CO- VID-19 from a swimming pool or the ocean,” said Paula Cannon, a professor of molecular microbiology and im- munology at USC’s Keck School of Medicine. “It’s just extraordinarily unlikely that this would happen.” On web pages giving pandemic advice, the federal Centers for Disease Control say, “There is no evidence that the virus that causes COVID-19 can be spread to people through the water in pools, hot tubs, spas or water play areas.” As both professors noted, the chlorine in most swim- ming pools is enough to inactivate the virus. The U.S. Masters Swimming organization makes the same point in its coronavirus briefi ng for frequent pool swim- mers. As for rivers, lakes and the ocean, experts say there are no known cases of COVID-19 transmission through those bodies of water. Also, the outdoors is understood to pose less risk than indoors because of free air fl ow. Surfrider Foundation staff scientist Katie Day has written, “Similar coronaviruses (to COVID-19) have been shown to remain viable and infectious, at least temporarily, in natural freshwater environments including lakes and streams.” But researchers say they aren’t sure if it’s possible for humans to contract COVID-19 that way. Even if it was theoretically possible, “I’m not con- cerned about the ocean and large lakes,” Michels said. “The dilution effect is so humongous that I don’t think there is a risk that anybody gets infected this way.” Said Cannon: “You’d have to probably drink the entire lake to get an infectious dose of the coronavirus.” Some viruses do make their home in fecal matter carried into the sea with other sewage; that’s why Southern California beaches often are closed im- mediately after rains. But research so far shows that COVID-19’s principal means of transmission is respira- tory, not fecal-oral. So far, scientists say, there is no data suggesting that the COVID-19 virus remains viable in saltwater. They’re also not sure if the virus remains infectious once it has been through a human digestive system or a wastewater treatment plant. “The virus really likes being 37 degrees Centigrade (98.6 degrees Fahrenheit) in human saliva. It likes to be warm and wet,” said Cannon. “Obviously, it can survive outside the body, but the clock is ticking as soon as it leaves our body.” ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS IN K-12 FOR THE 2020-2021 SCHOOL YEAR Openings a the following grade levels: K, 1 st , 2 nd , 3 rd , 5 th , 6 th , 8 th , 10 th FREE PRE-SCHOOL WITH a.m. TRANSPORTATION (August 31st, Start date) FREE TRANSPORTATION • FREE BREAKFAST SMALL CLASS SIZES • PERSONALIZED ASSISTANCE (All students, plus Title I Math, Reading and Special Education) POSITIVE BEHAVIOR SUPPORTS RESPONSE TO INTERVENTION CAREER TECHNICAL PROGRAMS INCLUDING FFA AWARDED U.S. NEWS BRONZE MEDAL FOR BEST HIGH SCHOOLS IN THE NATION REQUEST A PLACEMENT FOR YOUR CHILD AT: desiree.mcginn@npowdersd.org 541-898-2244 Superintendent Dixon PO Box 10, North Powder, Oregon 97867