by Rebecca Moss
HARRISBURG — Since the coronavirus emerged as a global threat, older
adults have proved to be most acutely affected and at risk of
complications and death. This is particularly notable for Pennsylvania,
which has one of the oldest populations in the United States and is home
to about 126,000 people in nursing homes and assisted living
facilities.
Yet as the virus gained a foothold here and spread rapidly through
these facilities — whose residents now account for half of deaths in the
state — staff members, residents, their families, and the wider public
still know very little about what’s going on inside, and whether the
companies that run them have the tools or staffing needed to protect
people and save lives.
State and federal officials have not released patient and death data
for individual homes, making it nearly impossible to examine if
facilities are properly responding to the crisis. State officials do not
require nursing homes to disclose cases to residents, family members,
or the public. At the same time, federal regulators have halted regular
inspections, and the state has said it would only investigate complaints
that indicate patients are in immediate jeopardy.
Taken together, they have left the companies that run these homes to largely police themselves.
The lack of disclosure “endangers not only the residents and the staff
but the whole community,” said Charlene Harrington, a professor of
sociology and nursing at the University of California, San Francisco.
“The community should be outraged.”
Last week, U.S. Sen. Bob Casey (D., Pa.) sent a letter asking the
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention to release a list of nursing homes nationwide
that have active cases. He said the information was vital and should be
provided by the government “on a real-time basis.”
On Monday, Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine said his state would change course and
make its list of nursing homes with cases public, as well as require,
not just encourage, facilities to notify residents and families within
24 hours when positive cases occur. Kentucky, Minnesota, and Washington,
D.C., have also released facility lists.
Nate Wardle, a spokesperson for the Pennsylvania Department of Health,
said a list of specific facilities cannot be released because the data
are being collected through multiple sources.
“Last thing we want to do is provide something and then have to correct it,” he said by email.
Only this week did the Department of Health begin posting online the
number of COVID-19 cases and deaths in long-term care facilities, broken
down by county. As of Thursday, there were 3,290 cases in 306 of
Pennsylvania’s roughly 1,900 facilities, according to the data.
The state also reported 365 deaths among nursing home residents.
Through news reports and interviews with sources and providers,
Spotlight PA was able to identify just under 50 facilities with reported
cases. In the absence of a complete list, the news organization is
asking for the public’s help in identifying affected facilities. If you
have information about cases or deaths, submit it below or contact
tips@spotlightpa.org.
Nationwide, the virus is believed to be in nearly 3,500 facilities,
killing more than 5,600 residents, NBC News found. But that too is based
on incomplete data provided by states that have released varying levels
of information.
Sen. Maria Collett (D., Montgomery), the minority chair of the state
Senate Aging and Youth Committee, called the lack of information in
Pennsylvania “beyond unfortunate.” Without it, Collett said, it is hard
to help facilities experiencing staffing shortages or a lack of
equipment.
Collett, who formerly worked as a nurse in a long-term care facility,
said there is more information provided about the flu and the common
cold than what the public can know now about the virus.
“If we are not doing those same things when we are staring down the
face of something as really critical as the coronavirus, then we are
failing people,” she said.
The state gets information about infections and deaths in nursing homes
through an online system as well as administrators who report to
department officials, Wardle said.
Nursing homes are required to use an electronic patient safety system
to notify the state about serious infections, including respiratory
illnesses, within 24 hours of identifying them. That means the state has
the information necessary to release breakdowns by facilities.
If it chose to release that data, that would be fine with Lori Mayer, a
spokesperson for Genesis HealthCare, a for-profit company that operates
38 facilities in Pennsylvania. But Mayer declined to release such a
list for all Genesis locations in the state.
The company has 350 confirmed cases statewide in 11 homes, Mayer said.
That includes cases and at least one death at Powerback Rehabilitation
in Philadelphia. A Genesis facility in Lehigh County has at least 87
cases among residents and staff, and 10 residents who have died, news
outlets have reported.
“I don’t want to provide a laundry list,” Mayer said. “We don’t provide
that level of detail holistically. It is just not something we would do
at this point.”
Many facility administrators contacted by Spotlight PA did not return
messages seeking comment. Some provided general statements about
resident care, but did not confirm whether cases had been detected.
Others simply said they had no comment.
One nurse, when asked about her facility’s coronavirus mitigation plans, said, “We don’t have any.”
“They are holding this information with clenched fists,” said Brian
Lee, executive director of Families for Better Care, a national
long-term care watchdog group. “It is the worst-case scenario for
residents in these facilities — this virus coupled with the poor
[facility] track records.
“You’d think public officials would be more empathetic. It just is mind-boggling,” Lee added.
Under Gov. Tom Wolf’s emergency disaster declaration, the state said on
March 31 it would only conduct inspections for complaints that indicate
a resident is in immediate jeopardy or for specific infection control
issues identified by federal regulators. But advocates say the lack of
transparency makes it hard for families or staffers to know about
problems to report.
Families are unable to visit to see if loved ones are getting the care
they need. Staffing shortages, which were a problem before the pandemic,
are exacerbated by nurses and administrators who have become sick or
were exposed and must go into a 14-day quarantine. As of Thursday, the
state reported 394 staff had tested positive for the virus.
Ombudsman programs — advocates, often volunteers, meant to act as the
voice for at-risk patients — have been cut off from visiting residents
since mid-March, communicating only by intermittent video or phone
calls.
“It is sad to see people dying and not really know what’s happening,”
said Diane Menio, executive director of the Center for Advocacy for the
Rights and Interests of the Elderly, which provides ombudsman services
in Philadelphia.
“Usually you have people going in and out of facilities and you can
observe what is happening, but there is no way to do that right now,”
she said. “There is not a minute that goes by you don’t worry when you
can’t see the person, when you can’t really communicate.”
Daniel Simmons-Ritchie contributed to this story.
Full Article & Source:
Pa. nursing homes left to largely police themselves as coronavirus deaths mount
No comments:
Post a Comment