Public health experts said it was not necessarily a mixed message to open up long-term care while clamping down on other sectors.
Dr. Perry Halkitis, dean of the Rutgers School of Public Health, said long-term care facilities must adhere to stricter safety standards than businesses, such as restaurants or retail stores.
“You can’t compare a restaurant with a bar where people are drinking and eating and socializing to somebody visiting their 85-year-old mother or father in a long-term care facility where … it is a hospital-type environment,” Halkitis said.
Restaurants, gyms, salons, and other businesses were still allowed to increase indoor capacity to 50% on Friday, but Murphy said that would likely be the last of the capacity expansions for a while.
Before indoor visits can resume, long-term care facilities have to “attest” to the state that they have adequate staff and personal protective equipment. Friends and family should check with the resident’s facility to see whether they have opened up indoor visitation.
Von Bargen said when her mom’s facility restarts visits inside, she looks forward to resuming some of the activities they used to do together — looking at pictures, listening to music, going for walks. But she noted that many families and friends won’t breathe a sigh of relief until they are face-to-face with their loved ones.
“We have to be realistic: We know it’s not going to happen quickly because facilities need time to implement and work on the logistics of getting everything in place,” Von Bargen said.
“People, I think, in general, are cautiously optimistic. They’re hoping for the best.”