More than 25,000 residents died and 60,000 were infected as the coronavirus
swept through U.S. nursing homes in recent months, particularly
affecting facilities with a history of low marks for staffing and
patient care, the federal government reported Monday.
The
virus also infected 34,000 staff and took the lives of more than 400,
according to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, the federal
agency that oversees the nation’s nursing homes.
The
numbers represent the first official national accounting of fatalities
in the 15,000 nursing homes that receive Medicare and Medicaid funding.
The tally, however, is incomplete. Only about 80 percent of the nation’s
nursing homes reported data to the federal government, and they were
required only to include cases since early May.
CMS
officials nevertheless said they were confident the figures offer a
reliable snapshot of the pandemic in the nation’s hard-hit nursing
homes.
“This represents a good picture of where we’ve
been,” CMS Administrator Seema Verma said in a call with reporters
Monday afternoon.
A Washington Post accounting
of cases and deaths in nursing homes shows a higher toll and that tally
rounds up data from less than half of the states. Based on reports from
21 states since the beginning of the pandemic, The Post found that more
than 28,000 residents have died.
Of the homes
that reported data to CMS, 1 in 5 recorded at least one death from
covid-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus, and 1 in 4 had at least
one positive case. In the District of Columbia and three states — New
Jersey, Connecticut and Massachusetts — more than 1 in 10 nursing home
residents died, according to the data collected so far by CMS.
An early analysis by CMS showed that nursing homes that have received
poor marks for nurse staffing and patient care were more likely to see
higher case counts than those with stronger track records.
Statistical analyses touted by the industry, by contrast, suggest that
the outbreaks have little to do with the quality of nursing homes.
Instead, studies indicate that a home’s location and size are better
predictors of an outbreak.
"Significant research from leading health experts, including analysis
from Harvard Medical School and Brown University as well as testimony
to Congress by the University of Chicago, has shown no correlation
between covid-19 outbreak and [Medicare’s] star rating system,” said
Beth Martino, American Health Care Association senior vice president of
public affairs, referring to the government’s quality grades for nursing
homes. “In fact, the first covid case was at a five-star rated
facility. As this research shows, the amount of covid-19 cases in
nursing homes has been directly linked to the level of the virus in the
surrounding local community.”
On Monday, Verma focused heavily on infection
control, saying the agency would strengthen enforcement, including civil
penalties, of nursing homes with persistent violations of federal
standards meant to prevent the spread of illness. The move, according to
CMS, would “help prevent backsliding, improve accountability and ensure
prompt compliance."
Nursing homes across the
country have struggled with infection control both before and during the
pandemic. In April, a Post analysis of about 650 homes with cases of
the coronavirus found that 40 percent had been cited more than once for
infection control deficiencies in recent years.
Verma said the agency will distribute $80 million to states to increase
infection-control inspections of nursing homes during the pandemic.
States that fail to inspect all Medicare-certified homes by July 31 will
be required to submit a corrective plan to the federal government.
Those still lagging by August will lose some of the money.
The new federal data, while limited, comes after months of criticism
from watchdog groups and patients’ families, who argued that
transparency is critical during a public health emergency. Since the
first known outbreak at a nursing home, in Washington state in February,
some states have repeatedly declined to name affected facilities or
describe the scale of the problem, forcing families to plead for
information from homes that were often reluctant to release details.
“I think people have a right to know what’s going on — and not all this
hiding,” said Toby Edelman, a senior policy attorney at the nonprofit
Center for Medicare Advocacy. “If the nursing homes would just tell the
truth, people would respect them a lot more than this language about ‘We
love our residents.’”
In April, CMS announced that all nursing homes
would be required to report case information to the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention on a weekly basis. CMS requested data by May 17
but gave nursing homes a two-week grace period to report. The agency
also announced a new rule requiring nursing homes to report cases to all
residents and their families.
Mark Parkinson,
president of the American Health Care Association and National Center
for Assisted Living, said the newly reported numbers validate the need
for widespread testing and more support for nursing homes.
“Especially
as we continue to expand testing for residents and staff in long term
care centers in June, we should anticipate the number of cases to rise
as asymptomatic residents and staff will be identified," he said. "While
an increase in these reported numbers may be startling, it will improve
our ability to confront this threat and protect our residents.”
The
data released on Monday did not include case or death counts for
individual homes. Those numbers are expected to be released on Thursday.
Full Article & Source:
More than 25,000 nursing home residents and 400 staff have died during pandemic, federal report shows
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