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Burlingame Long-Term Care Facility Decision Looming

The San Mateo County Board of Supervisors will decide Tuesday the fate of Burlingame Long-Term Care Facility. Do you think it should close or remain open?

 

The San Mateo County Board of Supervisors on Tuesday will decide whether to close a long-term care facility in Burlingame, a move that could cost as many as 200 jobs and force the transfer of 230 patients who live there.

The Burlingame Long-Term Care facility -- a county-run nursing home located at 1100 Trousdale Drive -- is housed in an outdated building that is no longer up to modern day standards of care, according to the San Mateo County Health System.

The home does not meet the state's seismic requirements for hospitals, it has limited patient access to outdoor areas, and has small, often crowded residential rooms, according to health officials.

An independent consultant and a San Mateo County Civil Grand Jury have both recommended that the county elect to close the facility when the lease comes up for renewal in June 2013.

"This was a very difficult decision knowing the impact it will have on the Burlingame patients and their families, as well as our staff members," Health System Chief Jean Fraser said in a statement.

"But it is the right decision given the age and condition of the building," she said.

The California Nurses Association and a San Francisco-based patient advocates group plan to fight to keep the facility open. Mike Connors, a spokesman for the California Advocates for Nursing Home Reform, said that the building is in decent shape and that the county doesn't have the capacity at other care facilities to accommodate all of the long-term care patients who will be forced to move.

"We have grave doubts about whether or not there are nearby facilities that could accommodate the residents," Connors said.

Patient advocates further argue that a relocation would inevitably cause some residents -- especially those with dementia -- to suffer "transfer trauma," which could risk the lives of patients when they endure the stress of being permanently separated from their familiar caregivers and surroundings, Connors said.

Health System officials have said that they will ensure "a safe and healthy transition" and that they won't close the facility until every patient has a new home.

The county will also make efforts to find jobs for nurses and medical staff at other facilities and provide support for those who can't be accommodated.

Tuesday's Board of Supervisors meeting will start at 9 a.m. at the Westin San Francisco Airport hotel, located at 1 Old Bayshore Highway in Millbrae.

--Bay City News

 

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Related Topics: Burlingame Long Term Care Facility and San Mateo County Board of Supervisors
Would you like to see the facility closed or remain open? Tell us in the comments.

Carol Mink

5:19 pm on Tuesday, February 14, 2012

I hope you can find a way to keep it open. My husband is in a Board and Care facility in Millbrae, and I know well how difficult this is for both the patients and their families.
Where, in heavens name wouldall these residents go?

Carol Mink
ccmink@comcast.net

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Miriam Finder

5:35 pm on Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Hi Carol--The Board of Supervisors voted earlier today against renewing the lease on the building once it expires, resulting in the closure of Burlingame Long Term Care. We'll have the full story up first thing tomorrow morning.

Antonio Catpo

8:23 pm on Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Should it close or remain open? tought question. We're in a crisis and there are no funds. But it's always the less fortunate who suffer more.

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Celeste B.

8:03 am on Thursday, February 16, 2012

It is a money issue but sounds like more a safety issue. I wouldn't want my loved ones staying in an unsafe facility.

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