Residents of a Belgian retirement home are able to soothe the pain of social distancing measures imposed by the COVID-19 pandemic by embracing their loved ones through a "hug curtain".
Staff at the Jardins de Picardie nursing home near the French border installed the large plastic curtain on June 14 and it has proven very popular with the residents, who had not been allowed any visitors for 11 weeks.
Visitors coming to see a family member, such as 35-year-old Amandine Josefiak, were enthusiast about the concept.
"It feels really good," she said after a hugging moment with her father Richard.
Lily Hendrickx, an 86-year old resident of the home, said the curtain was "the most beautiful invention" she had ever seen.
"It's terribly emotional for me," she said, adding that she cried the first time she was able to hug her daughter again.
The curtain, decorated with flowers and bright colors, is made of a big plastic sheet with two pockets on each side where residents and visitors or staff insert their arms.
After each use, nurses carefully disinfect the plastic curtain.
"Following coronavirus, with social distancing, safety measures, we all suffered a lot from this lack of affection," Marie Christine Desoer, the director of the home, said.
Belgium imposed its lockdown on March 18 to halt the spread of COVID-19 but has now started to relax the restrictions.
The disease has so far claimed 9,761 lives in Belgium, a country of 11 million, one of the highest fatality rates per capita in the world.
(Source: Reuters)