#NHLM FIGHTS FOR A HEALTHCARE SYSTEM THAT PROTECTS, RESPECTS AND CARES FOR ALL THOSE IN LONG-TERM CARE—RESIDENTS AND STAFF— ESPECIALLY BLACK AND BROWN PEOPLE
In March 2020, we, the Reality Poets, fought to protect the lives of residents and staff in our NYC nursing home who were put in harm’s way by the administration. Today, we lead the fight for residents and staff in all facilities.
Our Mission
Our #NursingHomeLivesMatter movement seeks to protect nursing home residents and workers who have been systematically disempowered and put in harm’s way by those in power. We plan on doing this by using our lived experiences and our voices to end racism and abelism in long term care. It is our goal to not just take policy, but eventually to make policy.
Through the work of the OPEN DOORS organization (an arts and justice initiative of the Center for Transformative Action) and our artwork, we the Reality Poets invite residents, families, staff, disability advocates and policymakers to join us as we reimagine the broken concept of life in a nursing “home”.
time for change
#NURSINGHOMELIVESMATTER BILL OF RIGHTS
We imagine long-term care where…
Each person is treated as an individual, and we’re not all lumped together in the same box where the assumption is everyone is elderly and a nursing home is our last stop. For some of us we have a lot more to see and do, while others have led full unique lives that should be honored and celebrated.
Administrators come out of their offices and work at least one day on the units so they can see what’s going on--how difficult it is when they give one nursing assistant 40 residents to care for and how important our individual needs are.
The state does not give advance warning ahead of inspections, so nursing homes follow all proper, respectful, safe protocols at all times – not just during the lead-up to an upcoming evaluation.
Residents are served delicious nourishing meals, not overcooked tasteless food that looks worse than what they serve in Rikers.
Residents have 24/7 access to reliable fast wifi to connect with loved ones, view entertainment, and further our education and careers.
Disability justice training is required for all staff.
All staff receive a decent wage that they can support their families on and that reflects the dignity and importance of their work.
Bring the love back to nursing – administrators must acknowledge and provide support to how nursing staff were put in danger during this pandemic, which caused so many to abandon the field, leaving us residents behind.
There are safe staffing ratios so that no resident is ever left in bed ringing the bell for hours unable to go see family and/or in danger of developing deadly sores.
Residents are informed immediately and clearly of all rules that affect us and we are included in all decision-making processes.
Families are never locked out again no matter the circumstances; they should always be allowed to follow the same safety protocols of staff to enter facilities and visit their loved ones.
Residents have resources and opportunity to develop our spiritual, recreational, creative and professional lives, and not warehoused like we are now.
In 1987, the Nursing Home Reform Act enacted the Resident Bill of Rights, a federal law for all long-term care facilities receiving federal funding. While the Resident Bill of Rights guarantees fundamental rights for nursing home residents, it left out some very important aspects of our lives.
We believe the NHLM rights are also fundamental and should be guaranteed.
Join the Movement
Tell your friends and family about #NursingHomeLivesMatter and download and share our #NHLM Bill of Rights.
There's no better way to make an impact than to become an active advocate yourself.
Donate
Your donation to #NHLM and OPEN DOORS allows us to connect people and create partnerships fighting for disability justice.
“One voice is considered a troublemaker. Many voices are change makers.”
— Peter Yearwood, Nursing Home Lives Matter member, Reality Poet and Coler Resident
what we’ve achieved
Mobility Magazine “People of the Year” 2021
#NHLM Founder Vince Pierce testified before Congress, June 2021
“Fire Through Dry Grass”, the Reality Poet documentary film which uncovers the devastation experienced by residents of a New York City nursing home during the coronavirus pandemic, anticipated release: 2024
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A MESSAGE FROM NHLM FOUNDER VINCENT PIERCE
I launched #NursingHomeLivesMatter in response to the dehumanization and confinement of Coler Rehabilitation + Nursing Care Center’s primarily Black and brown residents during the pandemic. At first we were fighting for our lives as COVID patients were brought into our home, safety precautions were totally ignored, and bodies piled up in two refrigerated trucks outside. As the lockdown dragged on for more than a year, we were fighting to see our families, or just to get beyond the iron gate and yellow tape that corralled us in like convicts or animals at the zoo.
Nursing home residents and workers across the country suffered the same way we did, and have been dealing with the same problems we have, long before anyone heard of COVID-19. That's why we're introducing a new vision for a nursing home that really is a HOME. Not a prison-like institution that prioritizes revenue over people.
Vincent Pierce
OPEN DOORS Co-Director, Reality Poet
#NursingHomeLivesMatter Founder
Image description:
Vince, a Black man wearing a dark winter jacket with green and yellow patterns and a red beanie, sits in a red motorized wheelchair with a laptop on his lap. Pete, a Black man in a black winter jacket, sits in a motorized wheelchair holding a black and white sign that reads: Nursing Home Lives Matter. Blurry bars of a metal gate cut through the image.
photo credit: Gary Dean Clarke