Caregivers of older adults should have priority in access to covid-19 tests
The covid pandemic-01 has exhausted caregivers of older adults, who in these times of high rebound in covid cases due to the highly contagious Omicron variant, they need to have priority to receive the covid tests and the booster vaccine.
“Now it is very difficult to obtain the tests easily when they are trying to protect the older adults they care for and those who despite being vaccinated, they are at high risk because they have preexisting conditions,” said Dr. Donna Benton, director of the Family Caregiver Support Center at the University of Southern California (USC) .
And he added that it is a challenge for the elderly who, for example, suffer from dementia and have to put them in a car to take the exam, and this can also happen with young people who have developmental difficulties.
During the videoconference: “Caregivers through Through the generations- Overcoming the covid pandemic-01, rapping to promote vaccinations, accessing boosters and tests, and other challenges,” organized by Ethnic Media Services, several caregivers of older adults spoke of the challenges they have faced during these almost two years of pandemic.
Dr. Benton said that most of the care for older adults is done by family members and it is almost invisible work.
“There are about 4.5 million family caregivers in California , and at the beginning of covid, they were not given priority to get vaccinated and give them protective equipment because they have less than 60 years“.
Fortunately, he said that as the pandemic changed, they were able to get vaccinated, which gave them a sense of security not to be a risk of infecting the people they care for.
Something they observed during the pandemic, she said, was that many family caregivers dropped out of the workforce because they couldn’t care for an older adult and young children at the same time, when that was the case for them.
On the other hand, he said that the Omicron variant continues to increase, and they have to do everything as possible to minimize the risk of infection and re-infection.
Although Ruth Rembret is an older adult, she takes care of her husband diagnosed with multiple myeloma, who can’t even afford to catch a cold, and since he’s in the middle of his treatment, his immune system is compromised.
“Sometimes I feel like I need a rest and who takes care of me. I recently had a mammogram, and now I have to have a biopsy.”
She says that she does not let anyone who is not vaccinated visit her house , still wearing a mask. “People don’t realize the danger they put on you when they don’t get vaccinated or don’t wear a mask. That is why the pandemic has been a challenge for my husband and me, who used to be able to do things like take out the garbage.”