CMS Task Force Unveils Guidelines For How Nursing Homes Can Fight COVID
The commission, announced by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services in April, was tasked with enhancing strategies for infection control and prevention in facilities. The task force was made up of 25 appointed members, including infectious disease experts and directors of nursing homes. Critics claim it does little to set higher standards.
ABC News:
Feds Unveil Plan To 'Reduce Suffering' For Nursing Home Residents And Staff Amid COVID-19 Pandemic
An independent commission set up by the Trump administration has unveiled a host of recommendations it says could help nursing homes "reduce the suffering and to save the lives of residents and staff" as they continue to wage a deadly battle against the coronavirus, though some critics say the commission didn't go far enough to help America's most vulnerable because it does not address enforcement of federal quality of care standards. (Romero, 9/17)
AP:
Report: Much Needs Doing To Shield Nursing Homes From Virus
The Trump administration is claiming “resounding vindication” from an independent commission’s report on the coronavirus crisis in nursing homes, but some panel members say that’s a misinterpretation of their conclusion that much remains to be done to safeguard vulnerable residents. People in long-term care facilities represent less than 1% of the U.S. population but more than 40% of the coronavirus deaths, according to the COVID Tracking Project, which has tallied 77,000 deaths among residents and staff. Those harsh numbers are a sensitive political issue for President Donald Trump, who is trying to hang on to support from older voters. (Alonso-Zaldivar, 9/17)
In other nursing homes news —
CIDRAP:
High Ratings, More COVID Tests Tied To Fewer Nursing Home Outbreaks
Three studies on COVID-19 prevention in nursing homes published today in Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report suggest that regular testing of residents and staff to identify asymptomatic infections may help contain outbreaks and that Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) star ratings could serve as a proxy for coronavirus outbreak risk. (Van Beusekom, 9/17)
Dallas Morning News:
Families To Be Allowed Into Texas Nursing Homes, But State Hasn’t Set All The Rules Yet
The state will allow family members back inside nursing homes for the first time since the coronavirus pandemic closed the facilities to visitors six months ago, officials announced Thursday. Nursing homes can choose whether to open their doors to certain visitors starting Sept. 24. The state has not laid out all the rules yet, however, leaving facilities with many unanswered questions, industry leaders said. (Morris, 9/17)
Also —
Kaiser Health News:
A Pandemic Upshot: Seniors Are Having Second Thoughts About Where To Live
Where do we want to live in the years ahead? Older adults are asking this question anew in light of the ongoing toll of the coronavirus pandemic — disrupted lives, social isolation, mounting deaths. Many are changing their minds. Some people who planned to move to senior housing are now choosing to live independently rather than communally. Others wonder whether transferring to a setting where they can get more assistance might be the right call. (Graham, 9/18)
Fox News:
Holocaust Survivor Beats Coronavirus After 81 Days On Ventilator
An 80-year-old Holocaust survivor who spent 81 days on a ventilator in a Pennsylvania hospital as he battled coronavirus is thrilled to be home in time to celebrate Rosh Hashana with his family. “I feel happy to [have] another Rosh Hashana in my life,” said Avram Woidislawsky, who was born in the Siberian mountains after his family fled the Nazi invasion in Poland. “It’s great.” (Hein, 9/18)