In less than two weeks, the coronavirus has claimed seven lives at one Long Island retirement community, with the latest death coming Saturday.
The heavy toll at Peconic Landing, near the seaside village of Greenport, has been accompanied by a sense of dread and isolation, as loved ones have been barred from visiting to keep the virus from spreading.
“I have a feeling that I very likely may never see my mother again,” said children’s author James Preller, whose 94-year-old mother, Ann Preller, is a resident.
The complex is about 100 miles (160
Preller, 59, said the isolation and disconnection are the cruelest aspects of the outbreak.
He said he’s not sure his mother, who lives in the community’s nursing
“I want to squeeze her hand. I want to look her in the eye. I want to see her smile and let her know that we’re there,” he said. “That’s what’s so really heart-wrenching about the experience right now.”
Preller doesn’t fault Peconic Landing staff for the outbreak of COVID-19, the first case of which was confirmed there on March 10, after a rideshare driver who also worked part-time at the facility picked up an infected passenger.
The residents of the community who have died ranged in age from 88 to 97. A majority were already ill from other causes.
A message posted on the community’s
“We are
The community currently houses more than 370 people. Some of their relatives have formed a Facebook group to share information and concerns.
Joan Schnee, of Columbus, Ohio, posted that her mother lives in the independent living section, is kept up to date on the community’s closed-circuit television station and feels safe.
“Most of her friends have all stayed and feel very confident in the level of caution and mandatory isolation,” she said. “For now, she insists on staying put.”
But others aren’t feeling as confident.
One woman, who did not want her name used because she feared it might affect the treatment of her mother, is concerned that visitors were still allowed at Peconic Landing through March 16 without screening precautions such as temperature checks.
The facility’s dining hall, known as the bistro, did not fully close until after breakfast on March 12, she said.
A woman who worked as a contractor at the facility, and also did not want her name used because she feared for her job, said the only COVID-19 screening for those entering the nursing facility in those early days involved answering questions at the front desk about whether you had been exposed to the coronavirus.
She said when she answered that everybody in the community had probably been exposed, she was still let in.
Peconic Landing officials said they are currently doing health screenings for all workers at the beginning and end of every shift. They said staff members are wearing the appropriate personal protective equipment. Anyone known to have been exposed to the virus is placed on paid leave and staff have been instructed to stay home if they are sick. Officials have set up a web page with updates.
“While we live and breathe the impacts of this virus every day, we must remember that we are all in this together,” Robert J. Syron, president and CEO of Peconic Landing said in a statement. “This global pandemic is bigger than all of us; we move forward working together to protect our members, our team and our local community.”
Former New York Lt. Gov. Betsy McCaughey, now chairwoman of the
The disease causes mild to moderate flu-like symptoms in most people, but can be fatal, especially for the elderly and those with preexisting respiratory and other medical conditions.
McCaughey points to Kirkland, Washington, where more than two dozen residents of a nursing home have died of complications from COVID-19.
She said she’s not familiar with all the steps being taken at Peconic Landing. But she said nurses and staff at most nursing homes and assisted living
“I would want to get my mother out,” she said.
Pat Eaton-Robb, The Associated Press