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I would leave him where he is unless you can pre-arrange & find resources for you to pay for all his care needs at your home (His insurance). Case managers are overwhelmed finding placement for those being DC’d from acute care facilities.
It is a blooming mess out there & now the US again has many new hotspots.
We’ll all be wearing masks for the next 6 months, I’ll bet.
Its not feasible to take him home without help.
He is actually safer where he is, and I sense a hesitation in you to bring him home as he sounds like a 24/7 care.
COVID is going nowhere for the forseeable future. Only a drug to cure it or a vaccine is going to be bringing us back to the new normal.
Don't look at the 'numbers' so much, they do not tell the whole story. Look at the overall mortality rate which has a smaller proportion of deaths than COVID does. And nobody is talking about that very real number.
Even WITH a vaccine, 40% of the population will get the vaccine, so we've got COVID forever.
How old is he? Does he have underlying conditions, like diabetes, COPD, asthma, auto immune disease of any sort, heart disease? If so, this may be a reason to remove him but if you can't get the in-home care he needs, it just may not be possible.
My 85-yr old MIL just recovered from covid in her facility (after 4 weeks). The staff brought it in. This is something you need to consider in bringing your brother home and then bringing outside help. That's the weak link, the uncontrollable variable.
MIL was very sick, was on hospice on week 4 but had a full recovery. She has no underlying conditions. Was given 5 lts oxygen and Tylenol on schedule. That's it for 4 weeks. Then she just bounced back and doesn't even remember any of it.