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• Only recently, the U.S. government has asked veterans’ homes, assisted living centers, group homes, and other senior housing facilities to report their past and current COVID-19 cases and deaths to obtain the most accurate count.
• Failure to report these numbers until now will result in an inaccurate count of the number of COVID-19-related deaths in the United States. How may this impact economic policies based on data from infection rates and COVID-19 deaths?
• Learn about the necessity for improved infection control in nursing homes.
In New York state, 19 nursing homes have each reported 20 or more deaths from COVID-19. A nursing home in New Jersey reported 70 deaths out of its 500 residents. In the words of New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, these homes have become a “feeding frenzy” for the virus and “the single biggest fear.”
With the clustering of people who are frail and have multiple other illnesses like heart disease, stroke, chronic lung disease and diabetes, the risk of severe illness and death from COVID-19 is much higher in nursing homes.
Yet, the United States does not know how many people are dying from COVID-19 in part because the government is only just now requiring nursing homes to start reporting numbers of presumed and confirmed cases and deaths to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The missing cases could dramatically skew the national death count. When France started reporting death data from some of its nursing homes, the daily COVID-19 fatality numbers almost doubled.
The Associated Press conducted its own survey in the U.S. and found there had been nearly 11,000 COVID-related nursing home deaths across the country as of April 24. However, just 23 states have been publicly reporting nursing home deaths. States also vary in how and where they are performing tests, and some count only proven cases and not also presumptive ones, leading to significant underestimates of the death toll.
As a geriatrician at Boston Medical Center and researcher at Boston University School of Medicine, I have watched in dismay as COVID-19 has become a deadly flash flood among the very old people I care for and study. I would not be surprised if the deaths in nursing homes at least double the U.S. COVID-19 death count.
In Massachusetts, 77% of nursing homes affected
Hints of what nursing homes and their residents and staff are going through have emerged from the states that have started publicly sharing data about them.
With Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker leading the charge, the Massachusetts Department of Public Health is providing a daily update on nursing homes where residents or staff have either tested positive or are presumed to be infected with COVID-19.
As of April 25, about 77% of Massachusetts nursing homes – 299 of 389 – had at least one case of COVID-19. That percentage will no doubt climb as the state carries out its mandated testing at nursing homes. About one-third of Massachusetts nursing homes reported more than 30 COVID-19 cases each among residents and staff.
Nursing homes are required to maintain infection prevention protocols to prevent the spread of infectious diseases into and within their facilities. But COVID-19, which is much more contagious than the flu, has punched holes in even the most careful and diligent facilities. Some nursing homes have also been in trouble for past problems with infection control.
It was initially estimated that on average, a person infected with COVID-19 led to an additional 2.5 people becoming infected. This basic reproductive number is called R0. A Los Alamos National Laboratory study released April 7 indicates that this earlier estimate is woefully low and that the R0 is more like 5.7. For comparison, the R0 for flu is around 2.
Among nursing home residents, the reproductive number is likely even higher than the average of 5.7. Many of the brave and caring staff in these nursing homes become infected, likely because of the intensity of this higher R0 and their exposure time with residents. By one report, nearly half of surveyed nursing homes reported staff staying home and not working because they had signs of or were proven to have COVID-19. The exposure to COVID-19 underscores how critical it is for nursing homes to get the adequate supplies of personal protective equipment they have been crying out for.
I believe it is likely that the majority of nursing homes throughout the U.S. and beyond have or will soon have multiple residents and staff who are COVID-19 positive. One large nursing home operator in Britain estimates that two-thirds of its homes have outbreaks.
We haven’t heard about most deaths yet
By the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s latest estimate, the U.S. has about 15,600 nursing homes with some 1.3 million residents. One quarter of those residents, about 425,000, are over the age of 80. In Massachusetts, the average age of death in confirmed COVID-19 cases is 82.
As of April 26, 56% of Massachusetts’ COVID-19 deaths occurred in nursing homes. The World Health Organization similarly estimates that half of COVID-19 deaths in Europe and the Baltics are among their 4.1 million nursing home residents. A minimum of 50% of the COVID-19 deaths occurring in nursing homes also agrees with the Kaiser Family Foundation’s review of data from the 23 states that are publicly reporting nursing home deaths.
The limited scope of counting people who have died from COVID-19 is not just a U.S. problem. A representative of British nursing homes, Care England, says that 7,500 people in nursing homes there have died due to COVID-19 – five times the U.K. government’s estimate of 1,600.
One indication of the high death toll from nursing homes comes from Belgium. The country has the highest per capita rate of COVID-19 deaths in the world – 57 per 100,000 people – primarily because officials there include nursing homes’ COVID-19 deaths in the national count and they are including both presumed and proven cases. Like Massachusetts, more than half of COVID-19 deaths in Belgium occur outside of hospitals.
The current U.S. rate, according to Johns Hopkins University, is 16 per 100,000, but its reports are only as reliable as its data sources, which include the CDC and state departments of health. This rate is likely lower than Belgium and 11 other countries because of the great variation across the U.S. in which data are not included, such as people who die outside of hospitals, and the data missing due to limited testing.
On April 19, the Centers for Medicare Services announced it would begin requiring U.S. nursing homes to report all confirmed or presumed COVID-19 cases to the CDC. I hope this will include past cases and deaths.
To get an accurate count, veterans’ homes, assisted living centers, group homes and other senior housing facilities must be required to report their past and current COVID-19 cases and deaths, as well.
There is plenty we still do not know about for why nursing home residents have borne the brunt of this pandemic. As Gov. Baker has indicated, “This is a topic that will get a lot of appropriate analysis after the fact.”
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Thomas Perls, Professor of Medicine, Boston University
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article. The Conversation is a nonprofit news source dedicated to spreading ideas and expertise from academia into the public discourse.