“Right here, we are doing it alone,” stated Cobble Hill Health Center CEO Donny Tuchman, addressing neighbors who had gathered Monday to show support for the nursing home in Brooklyn, New York. "These people right here," he said while pointing to health care staff members in full protective gear who had walked out of the facility to accept the applause.
“These people are deserving of everything that there is in this world,” Tuchman said of his workers.
Interviews by the Associated Press with people who have visited Cobble Hill support Tuchman's statements. They describe an overwhelmed facility that's underequipped to deal with its coronavirus outbreak, lacking the necessary staff, personal protective equipment as well as reliable testing.
“They were under siege,” said Daniel Arbeeny, who brought his ailing 88-year-old father from a hospital to Cobble Hill in late March. “They were doing the best they could, as far as we could tell at arm’s length, under siege.” On Sunday, Tuchman told AP that he believed that many other nursing homes have more deaths than Cobble Hill, but that the facility had been singled out for its honesty. He explained that Cobble Hill responded to the state's voluntary survey with cases in which it was “possible” that the COVID-19 had been a factor -- the facility wasn't able to test due to a lack of testing kits. Tuchman also claimed that he reported 50 deaths, not 55, though the state stood by its tally Sunday. “Our resident population is, by definition, fragile and vulnerable and almost all have significant underlying health issues,” read a statement from Cobble Hill. “Any deaths we've reported have been based on the possibility of COVID-19 being a factor. Because COVID-19 testing in skilled nursing facilities has been extremely difficult to obtain, there is no uniform measure to determine conclusively whether COVID-19 was a contributing factor in a resident's death.” A spokesman for the facility added that it had made repeated requests for more resources such as test kits and personal protective equipment for its already depleted staff. Up to 100 of its 350 healthcare workers have needed to go on sick leave. The facility also attempted to move some of its residents suspected of carrying the coronavirus to the military field hospital set up as New York City's Jacob Javits Convention Center. However, Cobble Hill was told that the area's main hospitals where more overwhelmed and were a higher priority for relief.Corporations pushing mandatory coronavirus vaccines for customers, not just employees
By Ethan Huff // Share
Chinese police violently disperse peaceful protesters in Chengdu
By Arsenio Toledo // Share
American cities were unprepared for financial fallout from coronavirus shutdowns
By Franz Walker // Share
Antimicrobial resistance up in animals raised for human consumption, warns study
By Michael Alexander // Share
BOMBSHELL: Media, big business, and political establishment colluded to rig 2020 election
By News Editors // Share
Netanyahu takes unusual flight path to avoid war crimes arrest
By bellecarter // Share
Unanswered questions and conspiracy theories swirl around Charlie Kirk assassination case
By kevinhughes // Share
Iowa Sen. Grassley demands DHS halt issuance of foreign student work permits
By ramontomeydw // Share
U.S. tap water under the microscope: The hidden risk of disinfection byproducts
By patricklewis // Share