Friday, May 22, 2020

May 23, 2020


Update from our dharma sister, Alisa Tu, regarding COVID and Gordon Manor

Part I


We are at the entrance of the Brave New COVID World at Gordon Manor. We have had a very good start with our new program amid shelter-in-place, physical distancing, PPE usage and infection control. Our residents in many ways are more resilient than many of us! They really are doing wonderfully under the circumstances. Many of our staff are also thriving in the new world, enjoying their work, really appreciating their residents and admiring their colleagues.
We have a new entrance. 
We have a large white tent outside of the former MUR room to the left of the front door on Gordon Street. It was a barn-raising with many hands from our volunteer heath care work force. This semi-permanent structure houses our new entry and exit rituals: the donning and doffing of the personal protective equipment, more familiarly known as PPE. This is the way that all of our workers and essential visitors will enter the building. This portal symbolizes our dedication to infection control. Keep the virus out.

A day in the new life. 

Their room is their sanctuary. Like many of us who are sheltering-in-place in our homes, our residents are relying on their rooms as their safe space. As such, we are doing our best to create spaces where we can see who they are and where they can be who they are. As we put their rooms back together (especially for those who had to relocate), we are noticing how much we, as their caregivers, reference their things to know and appreciate who they are. Thank you for sharing those things. 
Meals are served in their rooms. Food is love and nourishment. At Gordon Manor, our staff connect with our residents during meals. We gauge how well they are doing by how well they eat. 
We have added more activities into the day. We are delivering activities to the rooms. Magazines, plants, flowers, book, exercises. Certain individuals get to walk in the hallways and on the paths in the gardens as long as they wear a mask and/or can be directed to stay away from others. We have music stations throughout the building. The portable stereos are in the different common areas, and we have quite a collection of CDs. Yesterday, several residents spaced about 10 feet apart enjoyed some Big Band tunes while I improv danced to the music. It might have looked ridiculous, but our dear friends enjoyed it so much and clapped for me. : )  In stark contrast to the past weeks, the silliest acts become award-winning performances. In a few days we are planning on starting movies!

Outdoors.
We are truly blessed with a spacious outdoors and our folks are able to enjoy it. Monica Froehlich, Maria Hocke's daughter, gifted us with new chair cushions. Our residents are really enjoying them. We have placed the chairs throughout the entire garden so if you were to wander around, you can rest and enjoy a different view. Our more able seniors have taken advantage of the lull in gardening services and put themselves to work keeping the garden beautiful! Life goes on... During the height of the COVID storm, we were entering the building through the back. We would walk past the blooming roses into our "hot" facility. We were able to enjoy the garden every day. Every day was brutal and brutal. The garden was thriving. I went back there the day after Mother's Day. We had abandoned our garden tent city to prune the roses. We had abandoned our little tent encampment back there about a week before. When cutting back the lavender roses, I found a robin's nest. I was so worried that I scared the mother away, but the mother was just waiting for me to go. I came back to peek to make sure, and I checked again today. Mama is on her eggs.

Healthcare Consultants. 
We continue to benefit from our AMI helpers, Gurnick nursing students, Stanford EMS students, and various other consultants. We have daily check ins on how our operations can be improved upon. It is a lot of detail, but we are taking all of the suggestions and working them into our program. At times we are overwhelmed and are anxious about making the changes stick, but our employees are committed to the new world and are working hard to acquire the new skills.

Team Approach. 

The COVID-era room-based lifestyle has generated a new (for us) way to deliver the care. Our Hallway Care Team approach is almost fully operational. A quick summary is that each hallway has a care team that services just that hallway on each shift. The caregivers on the team help each other and because they are located only in one area, they can be more efficient with time as well as communications. Also each team will really know those residents well, and understand the care and the nuances of each person. So far so good. Both residents and staff are really enjoying the benefits of this approach.
(to be continued...)

___________________________________________________________________________

Our ZHS on-line schedule:  
  • Mondays: 7-8:30pm - zazen, short service, lecture/discussion
  • Tuesdays-Fridays: 5:30-6:10pm - zazen, offering of merit/bows
  • Saturdays: 8:00-10:15am - zazen, short service, tea, discussion/study
  • For more information:  www.zenheartsangha.org)  
___________________________________________________________________________


Special bows for today: 
  • Please offer bows for Dottie Kelly, Misha's family member, who died of lung disease on May 20th
  • Please offer bows for Annette Merrill, Misha's cousin, who died on May 13th from lung cancer
  • Please offer bows for Donald Kennedy, former president of Stanford University, who died from COVID-19
  • Please continue to offer bows for Nick Battaglia, Camille Spar's father, who died Aprill 13th 
  • Please continue to offer bows for the family of Alison Templeton, a PS parent, who died on April 1st 
  • Please continue to offer bows of well-being for:   
    • Claudio Pannunzio, dharma friend of Twining Vines Zendo, who is undergoing chemotherapy
    • Rev. Les Kaye, Misha’s Zen teacher, who is recovering at home while undergoing chemotherapy
    • Brendan, Kate Haimson’s son, who is recovering at home from surgery 
    • Michael Tieri Ricaud, Dainuri Rott’s brother, who is suffering from MS
____________________________________________________________________________________


Wonderful links shared by sangha members and friends:
__________________________________________________________________________________

Many thanks to those of you who are sending me articles to share, links to helpful information, and for making comments…it is a gift beyond measure. Please know that you can either leave a comment on the blog itself, or send something directly to me and I will be happy to paste it in.  

No comments:

Post a Comment