coronavirus,
but a wave of deadly outbreaks nearly every day since suggests that the
measures including a ban on visits and daily health screenings of
staffers either came too late or were not rigorous enough.
Recent outbreaks in Tennessee, New Jersey, Ohio, West Virginia,
Massachusetts and Maryland have pushed the death toll at the nation’s
nursing homes to at least 450 and highlight the biggest gap: screenings
of doctors, nurses, aides and other workers do not involve actual
testing but the taking of temperatures or asking health questions that
still allow infected, asymptomatic people to slip through.
“It’s still been like Swiss cheese with people coming in and out of
there, and thus you’ve got these explosions in senior facilities,” said
John BaRoss of Long Valley, New Jersey, who recently pulled his
85-year-old mother out of an assisted-living center out of fear of
infection.
After an outbreak of 100 infections and four deaths at the Gallatin
Center for Rehabilitation and Healing outside Nashville, Tennessee –
where the National Guard was called in to help evacuate the facility –
Sumner county mayor Anthony Holt blamed staff members who came to work
despite showing symptoms for Covid-19 and “exposed a lot of patients”.
“Things got out of hand,” Holt told the Associated Press. “Once
employees became symptomatic, they should have asked them to go home
immediately and called the health department. I don’t think that
occurred.”
After an outbreak near Dayton, Ohio, killed six people and infected
nearly 50 at a pair of nursing homes less than 10 miles apart, health
officials began scrutinizing medical specialists such as phlebotomists
and respiratory therapists who work in multiple facilities a day. One
such health worker who visited both homes tested positive for Covid-19.
In Maryland, Governor Larry Hogan said an outbreak that
spread like “wildfire” at a Mount Airy nursing home, killing five and
infecting 77, apparently began with an asymptomatic health worker who
made it past a temperature check screening and “infected the
population”.
Some relatives of those at the Sundale nursing home in Morgantown,
West Virginia, where 29 residents and staff have tested positive, say
more should have been done to keep coronavirus out before the federal
restrictions took hold in mid-March.
“The day before the shutdown, we just walked in wherever. There was
no sign-in. There was nothing,’ said Courtney Templeton about her last
visit to her 69-year-old mother.
Templeton also faults the home for not testing residents fast enough
and not keeping healthy ones separate from those just back from a nearby
hospital showing Covid-19 symptoms, including her mother’s roommate.
“She came back coughing and had a fever,” Templeton said of a visit
two weeks ago, after which she began begging the home to protect her
mother. “Can’t you keep the incoming patients separate? Can’t you keep
them quarantined for 14 days?”
Last week, Templeton got word both the roommate and her mom had the virus.
Though the federal government has not been releasing a count of its
own, an AP tally from media reports and state health departments
indicate at least 450 deaths and nearly 2,000 infections have been
linked to coronavirus outbreaks in nursing homes and long-term care
facilities nationwide.
And for the nation’s more than 15,000 such facilities and the 1
million people who live in them, experts say the situation could get
worse before it gets better.
They say the crisis has only deepened a chronic staffing shortage at
nursing homes because more workers are self-quarantining or staying home
with their children.
There is still not widespread testing of staff or patients, and shortages of masks and other protective gear persist.
“It’s an emergency situation, and it’s just been totally neglected in
all the national policy,” said Charlene Harrington, a professor emerita
at the University of California San Francisco and former state health
official. “They’re not focusing on the fact that these are the most
vulnerable of people in the whole country.”
And overcrowding in hospitals has some states seeking to force
nursing homes to take patients who are recovering from Covid-19, raising
fears they could spread it to residents inside.
New York issued a statewide advisory last week forbidding nursing
homes from denying residents admission “solely based on a confirmed or
suspected diagnosis of Covid-19,” California told its nursing homes to
make similar preparations.
Massachusetts announced plans to designate specific nursing homes as
care centers for Covid-19 patients – a move that has set it apart from
other states
“Sending hospitalized patients who are likely harboring the virus to
nursing homes that do not have the appropriate units, equipment and
staff to accept Covid-19 patients is a recipe for disaster,” said Mark
Parkinson, president of the American Health Care Association.
Federal directives on nursing home coronavirus prevention followed
the nation’s biggest outbreak in one place, the deaths of 40 at the Life
Care Center nursing home near Seattle. A government inspection found
infections at the home and others nearby were likely caused in part by
employees working while sick.
A 13 March order from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services
says nursing homes should immediately halt visitors and non-essential
workers, cancel communal dining and group activities, and actively
screen residents and staff for fever and respiratory symptoms.
Full Article & Source:
Coronavirus outbreaks like 'wildfire' at US nursing homes under lockdowns
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