Congresswoman Claudia Tenney Highlights Essential Caregivers’ Stories, Calls for Passage of Bipartisan Essential Caregivers Act
Washington, DC – Congresswoman Claudia Tenney (NY-22) spoke on the floor of the House of Representative yesterday to recognize the suffering of long-term care residents during the COVID-19 pandemic. She underscored the need for Congress to pass Tenney’s bipartisan Essential Caregivers Act to prevent such an injustice in the future.
Many essential caregivers were denied access to their loved ones during the pandemic due to misguided health policies. As a result, residents suffered as their physical and mental health declined while in isolation. In some cases, families were not even permitted to visit their dying loved ones.
H.R. 3733, the Essential Caregivers Act, would ensure every long-term care resident is permitted access to essential caregivers during any future public health crisis. During her floor remarks, Tenney also highlighted “Protecting them to Death,” a new book compiled by essential caregivers across the country that tells the stories of how their loved ones suffered in isolation. This book was spearheaded in part by Utica resident and essential caregiving advocate Karla Abraham-Conley. Abraham-Conley lost her mother in a nursing home because of a failure to thrive during prolonged lockdowns and the accompanying isolation.
You can read her remarks below and watch the full speech here.
The COVID-19 pandemic exposed so many vulnerabilities in our communities, our economy, and our healthcare system. None of us were prepared for the endless virtual meetings, school closings, and weeks spent in quarantine. Nor could we have been ready for the tragic loss of our neighbors and loved ones who were living in long-term care facilities across the nation.
Mister Speaker, I rise today speak about the grave impact that negligent policies implemented during the COVID-19 pandemic had on the most vulnerable in our communities. Over the past nearly two years, we watched our grandparents in nursing homes, our family and friends in group homes, struggling to maintain their health, dignity, and will to go on as they were left without the care and attention they deserve during long periods of isolation.
When I was sworn in to serve in the 117th Congress, one of the first bills I introduced was the bipartisan Essential Caregivers Act. This bill is a critical step to ensure that residents of long-term care facilities are not left to suffer in isolation during this or any future public health emergency.
While shut out from their family and loved ones in isolation, many long-term care residents began suffering from depression, extreme loneliness, and a major decline in mental and physical health. It is the injustice of this century that this is going unaddressed by Congress.
Since introducing this Essential Caregivers Act, we have started a coalition of passionate and tenacious fighters across this country – it is the Essential Caregivers Movement.
With me today, I have a book authored by Karla Abraham Conley, an amazing constituent of mine who also was prohibited from providing the needed care for her mother because of negligent policies in place by our former Governor.
Folded into each page of Karla’s book are harrowing stories from individuals who either lost a loved one in a long-term care facility or witnessed from a distance as their loved ones suffered from serious declines in their mental and physical health. These are not just the stories of New Yorkers: these are accounts from all across the nation as you fold through each part of this book.
I could flip every page of this book and tell you a story from every single state. They are heartbreaking. They are cruel. Most importantly, they motivate those in power and responsibility to make a meaningful change for our future.
When I see this book, I see the ways our laws have failed our constituents. I see the pain, but I also see the opportunity on every page. A chance for this Congress to stand up on behalf of these hurting Americans and boldly say, “I will act. I will defend your rights as an essential caregiver.”
Before I close, I would like to share an excerpt from Karla’s personal story.
“I was my mother’s essential caregiver every single day prior to the lockdown. Suddenly, I wasn’t there anymore and she was incapable of understanding why.” Karla continues by saying her mother “was left to die alone in her bed and not from COVID-19. She said to me via virtual visit ‘get me outta here. They’re going to kill me.’ Which is exactly what had happened.”
When Karla was shut off from her mother, her mother’s state of health rapidly declined. Karla’s mother developed sepsis, renal failure, high sodium levels, swelling of the brain, and other symptoms that went unnoticed. After Karla fought tooth and nail to admit her mother to the emergency room, her mother passed away a week later.
Mr. Speaker, what you have heard is unacceptable by all standards, but it is just one of thousands of stories I wanted to share. I want to thank Karla and so many essential caregivers — including our own Voices for Seniors, another advocacy group in New York State — for sharing this dark chapter of their life. Not many people can turn grief into action and start a nationwide movement, yet in a time of incredible sadness and loss, so many strong men and women chose to stand up and do just that.
I applaud their courage, their bravery, and their tenacity in this fight. I introduced the Essential Caregivers Act for each of them and their loved ones.
Mister Speaker, I am honored to lead this fight in Congress, but I am not leading it alone. I am joined by our colleagues from both sides of the aisle including the bill’s co-sponsor and co-lead, Congressman John Larson of Connecticut, and we are so grateful for him and his advocacy as well. I urge more of my colleagues to join us to pass this bill, to make it a reality, to help these people who are advocating across the nation to protect those who could be in jeopardy in the future.
I will remain committed to this fight for so many families who were forced to comply with the careless policies that prevented them for caring for their loved ones.