By Bruce Frassinelli
The state Health
Department is coming under increased criticism for its bungled handling
to the COVID-19 pandemic at nursing homes. Nearly 70% of all deaths in
the state attributed to the coronavirus have occurred at these and other
elder-care facilities.
Legislators and state Attorney
General Josh Shapiro are weighing in, too. The situation has become so
alarming that Shapiro last week announced his office has opened criminal
investigations into several long-term facilities, although he did not
indicate which are involved.
As of Sunday, 69% of all deaths
in Pennsylvania have been traced to residents and employees of nursing
homes and long-term care facilities. The crescendo of criticism has
resulted in the administration of Gov. Tom Wolf announcing last week
that the state is launching universal once-a-week coronavirus testing in
nursing homes to try to stop the spread of the deadly virus among this
vulnerable group. The average age of deaths among Pennsylvanians is
about 80 years.
A new Spotlight PA
investigation reveals the state had an aggressive plan to protect
nursing homes from COVID-19, but it was never fully implemented, and a
similar but far more limited plan wasn’t activated until mid-April, long
after major outbreaks at these facilities had taken hold. That put the
Wolf administration in the embarrassing position of playing catch-up.
On the legislative front, Rep.
Doyle Heffley, R-Carbon, plans to introduce a bill that would prohibit
the Health Department from requiring nursing homes and other long-term
facilities to admit infected patients.
In late March, the Wolf
administration ordered medically stable residents infected with the
coronavirus to be returned from hospitals to these long-term care
facilities. The American Health Care Association warned that this
ill-advised directive could lead to the loss of more lives. Regrettably,
these predictions turned out to be accurate.
The deadly coronavirus has
spread like wildfire through many nursing homes across the Northeast,
including Pennsylvania, and state officials are scrambling to better
protect these most susceptible members of society while their loved ones
look on in horror and near helpless frustration.
State Sen. Mario Scavello,
R-Northampton and Monroe, said that while the Health Department’s
stepped up testing plan is a step in the right direction, ‘more work
remains to be done to ensure they get the resources and supplies they
need.“
State Health Secretary Dr.
Rachel Levine conceded that because of the vagaries of how the
coronavirus strikes, a person can test negative one day and positive the
next, so the frequency of testing beyond once a week will be
individualized based on the number of cases in a facility. Levine said
daily public updates will now include cases, deaths and infected staff
members at these facilities.
Carbon and Lehigh nursing homes
have been particularly hard hit with 13 or 76% of Carbon’s 17 deaths
recorded there, while in Lehigh 109 of 139 of its total deaths (78%)
occurred in nursing homes. Other counties include: Northampton, 128 of
199 deaths (64%); Monroe 35 of 70 deaths (50%), and Luzerne, 93 of 127
(73%). At the other end of the scale, Schuylkill County’s nursing homes
have had just two of the county’s 15 deaths (or 13%).
As of Sunday, nursing homes and
other long-term facility residents have accounted for 3,057 of the
state’s 4,418 reported COVID-19 deaths, or 69%. This is a similar
pattern nationwide.
Meanwhile Levine has become the
target of at least one legislator. State Sen. Doug Mastriano, a
first-term Republican representing Franklin and parts of adjoining
counties, called on Levine to resign because of the department’s slow
response to COVID-19 infection in nursing homes.
Mastriano said the policy to
allow COVID-19 positive patients to be returned to elder-care facilities
after being hospitalized resulted in the virus breaking out like
wildfire and is the equivalent of “policy malpractice.”
Levine said these patients must test negative before they are returned from a hospital to the elder-care population.
He also accused Levine of a
conflict of interest for allowing her 95-year-old mother to move from an
assisted-living facility to a hotel.
On the surface, these optics
look terrible for the health secretary, but she explains it this way:
Her mother was in a personal care home, which is overseen by the
Department of Human Services, unlike nursing homes which are overseen by
her department. Levine said that her mother requested the move, so she
and her sister complied.
Full Article & Source:
Grim Reaper stalks Pa. nursing homes
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