This is a topic that comes up every winter among my acquaintances because local facilities (ALs) are closed during respiratory outbreaks (I believe the threshold is more than 3 active cases), usually for weeks at a time but sometimes for months. That means visits are discouraged, all group activities are cancelled and in some cases congregate dining is as well, more or less amounting to house arrest for some of the people living there who don't have the ability to leave the site. I've never seen any complaints here on the forum about this and I'm curious, is this common where you live? If not what is done differently?
What I question is locking down the whole place and banishing healthy people to virtual house arrest, especially when the number of people affected low. I really believe that staff showing up for work when they are sick and/or moving from room to room taking shortcuts with quarantine protocols (which I observed first hand) is a much more likely vector of transmission.
Infection control is definitely important, but despite best efforts this kind of thing is going to happen.
I thought these were reasonable safe guards. There were never more than 4 residents in my father's MC wing (out of 32-34) ill at once and no one died from illness or its complications. The staff didn't have much illness and that was very important to being able to maintain good care for the residents. My father had the flu once and the MC required an extra "half" attendant (1 attendant for 2 residents) during the 3 days of his acute illness and an extra cleaning fee when he recovered (I was surprised his supplemental insurance covered the extra fees). Generally, I dropped things off for my father, spoke to the staff and to my father over the phone and didn't physically visit him much during restricted visitation. I was as concerned about bringing illness home as taking some illness into the MC.
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