COVID-19: Plastic bubble brings joy to French nursing home
Couple meets in an anti-virus 'bubble' at husband's nursing home in Bourbourg
by AFPThe couple meets in an anti-virus "bubble" at Joseph's nursing home in Bourbourg, northern France, separated by a clear plastic sheet that allows them some physical contact, face-to-face, without the risk of infection.Image Credit: ReutersNathalie holds up the couple's dog, a white fluffy creature named Valco, so that Joseph, who has Parkinson's disease, can press his palm to its paw through the plastic.Image Credit: ReutersThe new coronavirus has proved deadliest for older people, and France imposed a strict no-visit policy at retirement homes when the country was placed in lockdown in March in a bid to curb infections.Image Credit: ReutersSo far, the virus has killed 10,336 people at French care homes, authorities say, more than a third of the national toll of 28,596.Image Credit: ReutersBut the lack of contact has been hard to bear for nursing home residents, many of whom are battling dementia, and psychologists have warned that the trauma of perceived abandonment can be fatal for some.Image Credit: ReutersThe separation has been hard on loved ones too. "We couldn't visit him for two months... This week I called for an appointment, and voila, the surprise!" Nathalie Szczepaniak said, pointing to the plastic reception tent she discovered upon arrival.Image Credit: ReutersShe had been expecting to see her husband only from a distance, but instead the igloo-like contraption allowed them to experience something as close as possible to real contact.Image Credit: ReutersErected just last week, the inflatable tent comprises a central bubble that acts as the reception area, connected to an entrance on either side that can be closed airtight.Image Credit: ReutersBefore the bubble, the home had tried to facilitate family access by placing residents in the on-site restaurant, with visitors waving and talking to them through the windows, from outside.Image Credit: ReutersBut they had trouble hearing each other, and many found the experience frustrating. "Today, with this bubble... they can talk, see each other without masks and almost touch," said Bernard, who recounts seeing one couple kiss through the plastic.Image Credit: ReutersAfter she leaves, the bubble is disinfected before the next visitors to arrive: a woman coming to see her father, his granddaughter in tow.Image Credit: ReutersThe bubble tent receives between six and eight visits a day, each lasting 30 to 45 minutes, and there is already a long waiting list.Image Credit: ReutersNathalie interacts with her husband Joseph behind a transparent plastic sheet inside a bubble room.Image Credit: ReutersA prototype was erected at the Bourbourg site without cost for a two-week trial period, with a view to making improvements before others are rolled out to more French care homes.Image Credit: ReutersSeveral have already shown interest, Dumas said, but the wind and rain-resistant installation, complete with electricity, costs between 7,500 and 10,000 euros ($8,250-$11,000) to manufacture, meaning financing will have to be found to reduce overheads.Image Credit: ReutersJoseph is escorted out of a tent after having been visited by Nathalie.Image Credit: ReutersNurses help Joseph to leave a bubble room for visits between residents and their families installed in the garden of the Fondation Shadet Vercoustre retirement home.Image Credit: Reuters