Baltimore Sun

Nursing home data out in open

Under pressure, Maryland to release facilities’ statistics on virus deaths, infections

- By Scott Dance

Amid pressure from families, patient advocates and the nursing home industry itself, Maryland said Monday that it will begin releasing data on coronaviru­s infections and deaths at long-term care facilities this week.

The announceme­nt comes days after state officials denied requests for that informatio­n from The Baltimore Sun, and after health officials also refused to share it with the state’s largest nursing home associatio­ns. A state health official said disclosing how many cases or deaths have occurred at specific facilities would compromise patients’ right to privacy and serve “no public health purpose.”

The about-face comes as county health officials revealed to The Sun on Monday that nursing homes and other long-term care facilities account for a significan­t portion of the 858 COVID-19 deaths reported across the state as of Monday. In Baltimore and Anne Arundel counties, for example, residents of those communitie­s represent two-thirds of deaths confirmed or suspected to be coronaviru­s-related, county officials said.

Long-term senior care facilities account for 17% of deaths in Prince George’s County, 20% in Baltimore City, 36% in Harford County, 67% in Baltimore County, 71% in Anne Arundel County, and more than 90% in Carroll County, where more than two

dozen people have died in an outbreak at a single Mount Airy nursing home. Officials in Howard and Montgomery counties did not respond to similar requests Monday.

In announcing that the state would make the informatio­n public after all, Gov. Larry Hogan said in a statement that transparen­cy is “at the heart of our response to COVID-19.”

Maryland is one of 15 states that has not made public detail about the prevalence of coronaviru­s cases and deaths in elder care facilities, according to data gathered by the Kaiser Family Foundation.

Mike Ricci, a spokesman for Hogan, said that while state health officials had legal reasons for keeping nursing home-level data secret, “given that we are in a crisis, and a fairly extraordin­ary situation, we are overriding those concerns in the interests of public health.”

Anna Palmisano, director of Marylander­s for Patient Rights, said she is glad to see more informatio­n released. But she said it’s most important that nursing homes follow guidance from the U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, which has proposed requiring nursing homes to inform residents and their families within 12 hours of a positive coronaviru­s test at their facility.

“That’s really important so that families and their representa­tives know,” Palmisano said. “Families are investing a lot of money so their relatives can be safe and the irony is, it’s the opposite that has happened.”

Some nursing home administra­tors may be “unhappy” with the decision because of concerns the informatio­n will cause them to lose staff and residents, said Kevin Heffner, CEO of the LifeSpan Network, an associatio­n of nursing homes across Maryland and Washington, D.C.

“Of course we’ll support what the governor is trying to do,” he added.

At the same time, the informatio­n will help nursing home leaders who have been asking the state for lists of facilities that have confirmed coronaviru­s outbreaks because they say they need the informatio­n to help contain outbreaks. Many nursing home staff and contractor­s work in multiple facilities.

Because visitation to nursing homes has been restricted since the pandemic reached Maryland, it is believed outbreaks have largely started with staff members, who in many cases may not be showing symptoms.

A lack of testing for people who aren’t showing typical COVID-19 symptoms has increased that risk, said Morgan Katz, an assistant professor at Johns Hopkins University.

Katz, who has been working with nursing homes on “strike teams” assembled by the state to address nursing home outbreaks, said investigat­ions have backed up concerns about the asymptomat­ic spread. When she has helped conduct testing of all staff and residents at nursing homes, as many as two-thirds of people who have tested positive were not showing symptoms at the time of their test, Katz said.

Such broad testing revealed an outbreak of 170 infections, including both residents and staff, at FutureCare Lochearn in Baltimore. But, Katz said, such large outbreaks are likely far more typical than is realized.

“What we found is that in most of these facilities, if they had one or two symptomati­c residents, it had spread really throughout the facility and we really weren’t capturing the asymptomat­ic residents,” she said.

So Katz said she was not surprised to learn that nursing homes are accounting for such a large proportion of deaths in counties such as Anne Arundel and Baltimore.

“We’re seeing these numbers really across the world and across the U.S.,” Katz said. “You have a highly vulnerable [population] in a group living setting. They are going to be at highest risk.”

The informatio­n could help direct how resources and other assistance are provided to nursing homes during the pandemic going forward.

Heffner said the nursing home industry is making the case to state health officials that a host of resources, equipment and attention given to hospitals to prepare for an expected surge should be shifted in part to nursing homes.

“How about we take care of the people who are sick now, and figure out, if there is a [hospital] surge, how to manage that then?” Heffner said.

Joe DeMattos, CEO of the Health Facilities Associatio­n of Maryland, said the data on nursing home deaths underscore­s a request his organizati­on and two others sent Hogan last week, asking for a greater emphasis on coronaviru­s surveillan­ce at nursing homes, regardless of residents’ or staff members’ symptoms, or lack thereof.

“What they really need to do is get serious about testing,” he said.

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 ?? DYLAN SLAGLE/CARROLL COUNTY TIMES ?? A police car guards the entrance to the Pleasant View Nursing & Rehabilita­tion center in Mount Airy on April 1.
DYLAN SLAGLE/CARROLL COUNTY TIMES A police car guards the entrance to the Pleasant View Nursing & Rehabilita­tion center in Mount Airy on April 1.

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