Just three staff members reported to Life Care Center
in Kirkland, Washington, between Tuesday night and Wednesday morning to
serve about 90 residents, a first responder familiar with the situation
told CNN. Still, neither the King County Health Department nor the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention sent personnel Thursday to
provide assistance -- though they have since.
First
responders were concerned that staff members were not wearing
appropriate personal protective equipment to handle the high number of
patients with probable coronavirus. They also arrived to the facility to
find employees using positive pressure bag valve masks to ventilate
potential coronavirus patients -- even though firefighters have been
told not to use such masks, as they can disperse more particulate into
the air, the responder said.
The
children and other relatives of patients in the facility have been
attempting to sound the alarm about conditions in the facility for
weeks.
A spokeswoman for the city of Kirkland
told CNN that "our firefighters are taking direction from King County
Emergency Medical Services regarding the personal protective equipment.
At this time we have been told to continue providing respiratory support
including positive pressure bag valve masks."
CNN
has reached out to the county medical services officials, Public Health
Seattle-King County, the Washington state Department of Health and the
CDC for reaction.
Life Care
spokesman Timothy Killian told CNN Monday that the first responder "did
not see the full extent of what was happening within the facility in the
middle of the night."
"A large
number of our employees would have been in rooms treating and taking
care of patients and they wouldn't have been immediately visible to
anybody who walks in," Killian said.
A spokesperson for the Life Care Center said during a news conference
Saturday that the CDC has now provided it with extra nurses,
practitioners and doctors.
State
governments are working to contain the spread of the novel coronavirus
in the US, as federal officials say more testing for the illness will
likely see the number of known cases increase. As of Saturday night,
there were at least 19 deaths in the United States
-- at least 14 of them tied to the Life Care Center in Kirkland alone,
according to a Seattle and King County Public Health news release.
Two
new coronavirus deaths out of 16 total recorded in the state are linked
to the facility, according to the release. A man in his 70s, who was a
resident at the care home, died on March 2, while a woman in her 80s,
who was also a Life Care resident, died on March 5, officials said.
While
staff are caring for patients to the best of their ability, "we cannot
make any promise that exposure, further exposure, within the facility is
not happening," said Tim Killian, a spokesman for Life Care Center of
Kirkland.
Some Life Care Center residents have gone from no symptoms to acute symptoms within an hour, Killian said.
"We've had patients die relatively quickly under those circumstances," he said.
Killian
told reporters during a Saturday briefing that 70 employees are showing
coronavirus symptoms. Those employees have been asked not to return to
work.
As of February 19, the
facility employed 180 staff members and housed 120 residents. Fifty-four
residents have since been transferred to various hospitals, Killian
said, and all residents at the facility are confined to their rooms.
On Thursday, the facility received 45 coronavirus tests, the results of which are still pending, he said.
Life
Care Center of Kirkland said in a statement later Saturday that they
had received additional testing kits from the Washington State
Department of Health and are now able to test all remaining residents in
their facility. The tests are currently being administered, according
to the facility's statement.
While the Trump administration -- through a response effort led by Vice President Mike Pence and a White House task force
-- has sought to assure the American public, officials have still not
explained why the federal government has been so slow to distribute
testing kits in bulk and has dragged its feet on removing restrictions
for who can conduct diagnosis.
Health
officials briefing the media at the White House Saturday afternoon
could not say exactly how many people had been tested related to using
the 5,861 tests conducted by the CDC and public health labs across the
country. Various factors impact the number of people who can be tested,
including the fact that most people receive at least two tests -- swabs
for the nose and the throat.
FDA
Commissioner Dr. Stephen Hahn said Saturday that 1,583 patients have
been tested by the CDC but that the government doesn't know how many
patients received tests from the 2,361 specimens collected by state and
local labs.
Each day the number of tests is rising, and the numbers are soon expected to dramatically jump, he said.
Federal
officials say 2.1 million tests will be shipped out by Monday, with a
further goal of 4 million tests to be shipped by the end of next week.
Full Article & Source:
This nursing home is at the center of Washington's coronavirus. Here's what one first responder saw there
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