by Dr. Joseph Mercola
July 10, 2020
from
Mercola Website
Story at-a-glance
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On average, 42% of all COVID-19 deaths in the U.S. have occurred in
nursing homes, assisted living and other long-term care facilities.
This is extraordinary considering this group accounts for just 0.62%
of the population
-
Some states have nursing home mortality rates that are significantly
higher than the national average. In Minnesota, over 81% of all
COVID-19 deaths have occurred in nursing homes and assisted living
facilities
-
In Massachusetts and Connecticut, COVID deaths per 10,000 nursing
home and assisted living facility residents were 703 and 827
respectively. In New Jersey, nearly 10% of all long-term care
facility residents have died of COVID-19
-
March 25, 2020, instructions from the New York Department of Health
stated nursing homes were not allowed to deny admission or
readmission of a COVID-19-positive patient. Nursing homes were even
"prohibited from requiring a hospitalized resident who
is determined medically stable to be tested for COVID-19
prior to admission or readmission"
-
New York's directives seem particularly questionable, considering
the Navy hospital ship USNS Comfort was docked in New York City
harbor, yet treated only 182 patients, and the temporary hospital
facility at the Javits Convention Center, which had a capacity of
2,500, closed after treating just over 1,000 patients
Early on in the pandemic it became clear that older individuals were
at disproportionate risk of severe COVID-19 infection and death.
According to an analysis 1 conducted by the Foundation for Research
on Equal Opportunity, which included data reported by May 22, 2020,
an average of 42% of all COVID-19 deaths in the U.S. had occurred in
nursing homes, assisted living and other long-term care facilities.
This is beyond extraordinary, considering this group accounts for
just 0.62% of the population.
Avik Roy, president of the Foundation for Research on
Equal Opportunity, wrote an article 2 about their
findings in Forb
es, pointing out that,
"42% could be an
undercount," since "states like New York exclude from their
nursing home death tallies those who die in a hospital, even if
they were originally infected in a long-term care facility."
Roy also testified before
Congress June 17, 2020, about racial disparities in COVID-19 and the
health care system. 3
Why Do Some States Have Exaggerated Nursing Home Death Rates?
Disturbingly, some states have nursing home mortality rates that are
significantly higher than the national average of 42%.
Minnesota 4
tops the list in this regard, with 81.4% of all COVID-19 deaths
having occurred in nursing homes and assisted living facilities.
Ohio comes in second, with a rate of 70%.
As reported by Roy: 5
"Another way to cut the data is to look at nursing home and assisted
living facility deaths as a share of the population that lives in
those facilities.
On that basis, three states stand out in the
negative direction: New Jersey, Massachusetts, and Connecticut.
In Massachusetts and Connecticut, COVID deaths per 10,000 nursing
home and assisted living facility residents were 703 and 827,
respectively.
In New Jersey, nearly 10 percent of all long-term care
facility residents - 954 in 10,000 - have died from the novel coronavirus."
Thousands Have Died Unnecessarily
By and large, nursing homes are ill equipped to care for COVID-19
infected patients. 6
They're set up to care for elderly patients,
whether they are generally healthy or have chronic health problems,
but they're not typically equipped to quarantine and care for people
with highly infectious disease.
It's logical to assume that comingling infected patients with non-infected ones in a nursing home would result in exaggerated death
rates, as the elderly are far more prone to die from any infection,
including the common cold.
March 17, 2020, Stanford epidemiologist John Ioannidis wrote an
op-ed in STAT news, 7 stating that,
"even some so-called mild or
common-cold-type coronaviruses have been known for decades [to] have
case fatality rates as high as 8% when they infect people in
nursing homes."
March 25, 2020, instructions from the New York Department of Health
stated nursing homes were not allowed to deny admission or
readmission of a COVID-19-positive patient. Nursing homes were even,
"prohibited from
requiring a hospitalized resident who is determined medically
stable to be tested for COVID-19 prior to admission or
readmission."
In other words, we should not be surprised that COVID-19
disproportionally affects older people.
Most elderly are frail and
have underlying health problems that make them more prone to death
from any infection whatsoever.
Since this is common knowledge,
why
did some states decide to violate federal guidelines and send
COVID-19 patients back into nursing homes?
New York Governor in the Hot Seat
Democratic governor of New York, Andrew Cuomo, appears to have been
among the most negligent in this regard.
March 25, 2020,
instructions from
the New York Department of Health
stated nursing
homes were not allowed to deny admission
or readmission of a
COVID-19-positive patient.
Nursing homes were even,
"prohibited from
requiring a hospitalized resident
who is
determined medically stable
to be tested for
COVID-19 prior
to admission or
readmission."
As reported by Roy:
8
"As recently as April 23, Cuomo declared
9 that nursing homes 'don't
have a right to object' to accepting elderly patients with active COVID
infections.
'That is the rule
and that is the regulation and they have to comply with
that.'
Only on May 10 -
after the deaths of nearly 3,000 New York residents of nursing
homes and assisted living facilities - did Cuomo stand down and
partially rescind his order."
Cuomo's order seems particularly dubious considering,
the Navy
hospital ship USNS Comfort was docked in New York City harbor.
The
ship, which had a 1,000-bed capacity, was barely used. 10
It departed NYC on
April 30, having treated just 182 patients. 11
A temporary hospital facility at the Javits Convention Center was
also erected to deal with predicted hospital overflow.
It had a
capacity of 2,500, and closed May 1, 2020, having treated just over
1,000 patients. 12
With all that available surplus space equipped for
infectious disease control,
why were COVID-19 patients forced back
into nursing homes where they would pose a clear infection risk to
other high-risk patients...?
Several Governors Violated Federal Guidelines
June 22, 2020, Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services
administrator Seema Verma condemned the actions of Cuomo and
"other
Democrat governors", including,
-
Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf
-
New
Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy
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Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer
-
California Gov. Gavin Newsom,
...who contradicted federal guidelines
for nursing homes in their own state guidance.
"Our guidance was
absolutely crystal clear," Verma said in an
exclusive interview with Breitbart reporter Matthew Boyle,
adding: 13
"Any insinuation to the contrary is woefully mistaken at best and
dishonest at worst. We put out our guidance on March 13... It
says...
'When should
a nursing home accept a resident who is diagnosed with
COVID-19?...
A nursing home can accept a resident diagnosed with COVID-19 and
still under transmission-based precautions,'
...which means if this
person is infectious you have to take precautions.
It says,
'as long as the facility can follow CDC guidance for
transmission-based precautions.'
It says:
'If a nursing home cannot,
it must wait until these precautions are discontinued,'
...meaning if
you are not able to care for this patient - somebody is still
positive and you're not equipped to care for the patient, then you
shouldn't accept the patient into your care.
That's really important because longstanding discharge
- when you're
discharging a patient from the hospital, longstanding guidelines
require when you transfer them somewhere you transfer them to a
place that can take care of their needs whether they're going home
or they're going to a nursing home or some other facility …
I
just don't think we should ever put a nursing home in a
situation or a patient where we force them to take a patient
they are not prepared to care for.
That not only
jeopardizes the patient but it jeopardizes the health and
safety of every single resident in that nursing home."
Stark Differences Between Nursing Homes
While Cuomo has tried to deflect criticism for his devastating
nursing home directive, the facts seem to speak for themselves.
ProPublica published an investigation
14 June 16, 2020, comparing a
New York nursing home that followed Cuomo's order with one that
refused, opting to follow the federal guidelines instead.
The
difference is stark...
According to ProPublica, 15
by June 18, the Diamond Hill nursing home
- which followed Cuomo's directive - had lost 18 residents to
COVID-19, thanks to lack of isolation and inadequate infection
control. Half of the staff (about 50 people) and 58 patients were
also sickened.
In comparison, Van Rensselaer Manor, a 320-bed
nursing home located in the same county as Diamond Hill, which
refused to follow the state's directive and did not admit any
patient suspected of having COVID-19, did not have a single
COVID-19 death.
A similar trend has
been observed in other areas.
As reported by ProPublica:
16
"New York was the only state in the nation that barred testing of
those being placed or returning to nursing homes.
In the weeks that
followed the March 25 order, COVID-19 tore through New York state's
nursing facilities, killing more than 6,000 people - about 6% of its
more than 100,000 nursing home residents …
In Florida, where
such transfers were barred, just 1.6% of 73,000 nursing home
residents died of the virus. California, after initially moving
toward a policy like New York's, quickly revised it.
So far, it has lost
2% of its 103,000 nursing home residents."
Florida Republican Gov.
Ron DeSantis actually took the opposite
position with regard to nursing homes.
Not only were hospitals not
permitted to discharge COVID-19 patients into nursing homes, but all
nursing home workers were also required to be screened for symptoms
before entering facilities each day, and ensuring availability of
personal protective equipment was prioritized.
In California, Los Angeles County nursing homes are such a hotspot,
and local leaders describe the situation as a,
"pandemic within a
pandemic." 17
There, the fact that many of the facilities are
unusually large appears to be part of the problem.
They also have a higher percentage of people of color - another
high-risk group - both working and residing in these facilities.
Low
pay, poor quality of care and inferior infection control add to the
problem...
COVID-19 Primarily Spread in Health Care Settings
Overall, COVID-19 transmission appears to be rampant within our
health care system in general, not just in nursing homes.
As noted
in "20% of COVID Patients Caught Disease at Hospital," British data
suggests 1 in 5 COVID-19 patients actually contracted the disease at
the hospital, while being treated for something else.
SARS-CoV-2 is being transmitted not only between patients but also
from health care workers to patients.
When you add it all together,
nursing homes and nosocomial infections (i.e., infections
originating in or acquired from a hospital 18), plus the spread from
workers to family members, likely account for a vast majority of all
COVID-19 deaths.
Without doubt, if nursing homes don't start getting this right, they
eventually won't have enough patients to stay in business.
Unfortunately, rather than tackle the problem head-on and implement
sensible safety measures across the board, the nursing home industry
is instead seeking immunity from COVID-19 related lawsuits.
I
discussed this in "COVID-19
and Nursing Homes - The No. 1 Place Not to Be."
According to NBC News:
19
"So far at least six states have provided explicit immunity from
coronavirus lawsuits for nursing homes, and six more have granted
some form of immunity to health care providers, which legal experts
say could likely be interpreted to include nursing homes …
Of the states that have addressed nursing home liability as a
response to the outbreak, two - Massachusetts and New York - have
passed laws that explicitly immunize the facilities.
Governors in
Connecticut, Georgia, Michigan and New Jersey have issued executive
orders that immunize facilities."
In other words, New York not only issued rules requiring COVID-19
infected patients to be admitted into nursing homes, and barred them
from testing, it also granted nursing homes immunity against
lawsuits.
Talk about triple injury...
Clearly, New York nursing home patients
have gotten ill and died due to willfully negligent directives.
On
top of that, families have been deprived of due process and any
legal recourse for these beyond-reprehensible criminal actions.
Congressional Members Demand Answers
While several states have failed to protect their most vulnerable,
New York's actions stand out as being particularly egregious and, so
far, no sound justifications have been forthcoming.
June 15, 2020, House Minority Whip Steve Scalise, R-La., and four
Republican members of the Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus
sent letters 20 to the governors of New York, Michigan,
California, New Jersey and Pennsylvania, demanding answers: 21
"Why did they give
those orders?
Why did they go
against the safety guidelines that were issued from CMS?
And why won't they
give us all the disclosure of the patient information that they
were giving and then all of a sudden when we started discovering
this they clammed up and they're not letting the public see what
these numbers really are?" Scalise said.
Curiously, Select Subcommittee Democrats not only declined to join
Republicans in the proposed nursing home oversight effort, they also
refused Scalise's call to,
"get to the bottom of
what motivated these decisions" in New York, Michigan,
California, New Jersey and Pennsylvania, and they did not sign
the letters to the governors of those states. 22
In a press release by Scalise, Select Subcommittee member
Jackie Walorski (R-Ind.) is quoted saying: 23
"Just about the worst possible thing to do is knowingly introduce coronavirus to the most vulnerable populations, yet that's exactly
what several states did by mandating nursing homes accept infected
patients.
These misguided policies deserve close scrutiny,
and the leaders who put them in place have a lot of tough
questions to answer.
Now is not the time
to look the other way while placing blame for this crisis on
states that are taking a measured, responsible approach to
reopening our economy and protecting our communities."
Sources and
References
1 -
DISRN.com May 26, 2020
2, 5, 8 -
Forbes May 26, 2020
3 -
FreOpp.org Confronting
Racial Disparities in COVID-19 and the Health Care
System (PDF)
4 -
MPR News June 12, 2020
6 -
OECD.org COVID-19 in Long-Term Care Sector
7 -
STAT March 17, 2020
9 -
New York Post April 23,
2020
10 -
CNN April 3, 2020
11 -
USNI News June 12, 2020
12 -
ABC7Ny May 1, 2020
13 -
Breitbart June 22, 2020
14, 15, 16 -
ProPublica June 16, 2020
17 -
Daily News June 20, 2020
18 -
Medicinenet.com Definition of Nosocomial
19 -
NBC News April 27, 2020
20, 22, 23 -
Scalise.house.gov June 15,
2020
21 -
Fox News June 17, 2020
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