Baltimore Sun

Canceled contract leads to calls for oversight

State lawmakers say more control of spending needed

- By Luke Broadwater and Pamela Wood

After Maryland officials terminated a contract with a politicall­y connected firm, lawmakers are calling for greater oversight of the millions of dollars the Hogan administra­tion is awarding to companies through emergency purchases during the pandemic.

“I appreciate the Governor’s quick actions to protect Marylander­s, but we need to safeguard taxpayer dollars from unscrupulo­us companies, no matter what their connection­s,” said House of Delegates Speaker Adrienne A. Jones, a Baltimore County Democrat. “I’ve asked [the] Appropriat­ions [Committee] to take a longer look at this issue in the coming months.”

called “bridge teams,” that will help facilities manage and tamp down COVID-19 outbreaks.

“This week, based on the survey of all facilities, that universal testing will commence,” Hogan spokesman Mike Ricci said. “Once they finish their survey of all facilities, and get the bridge teams trained, they’ll fan out.”

But it’s unclear when staff will be tested because facilities first need to develop plans to replace any workers who test positive, said Dr. Nilesh Kalyanaram­an, the Anne Arundel County health officer. Many facilities are seeking help from the same staffing agencies, complicati­ng the problems.

“The logistics to do this are not trivial,” Kalyanaram­an said.

Nursing homes remain at the epicenter of the state’s coronaviru­s outbreak, accounting Monday for 18% of confirmed cases and 44% of deaths. There are 16,000 nursing homes residents and 36,000 staff across the state, according to the Health Facilities Associatio­n of Maryland, a trade associatio­n of more than 200 elderly care providers and related businesses.

The virus is believed to be spreading through the facilities via asymptomat­ic carriers, leading to at least 525 resident deaths so far.

Branch acknowledg­ed that that spread is likely continuing as nursing homes arrange for nurses, nursing assistants and other staff to replace those who are found to be infected when testing begins.

“If I had testing right today, that would have been addressed, and we’d be testing already,” he said. “I’m not holding off testing waiting for a plan. I’m basically waiting for tests.”

But with such limited testing available so far, the nursing homes must line up new staff — or risk not having enough caregivers. Plus, before they can get to work in the facilities, those replacemen­t staffers must be tested as well.

All workers are meanwhile required to wear protective equipment including masks and face shields, to protect residents from potential exposure.

Joe DeMattos, CEO of the Health Facilities Associatio­n, called the state’s role in increasing testing “critical.” Nursing home administra­tors say a lack of testing has been a major weakness in efforts to contain the coronaviru­s, along with struggles to maintain stocks of masks, gowns and other personal protective equipment.

Hogan unveiled the plans for broader testing a day after the state on Tuesday revealed the extent of outbreaks i n nursing homes around the state. The data, which health advocates and families had been pressing the state to make public, showed that the coronaviru­s has spread to the majority of residents in some nursing homes.

Hogan said the state was “going on offense against this virus, attacking it from every angle with everything we’ve got.”

He appointed Col. Eric Allely, the state surgeon of the Maryland National Guard who the governor last week tapped to serve as an emergency safety and compliance officer for nursing homes, to lead the effort to roll out the expanded testing.

The effort also involves gathering enough testing equipment — swabs that are in high demand across the globe — to collect specimens from so many people.

The much celebrated tests that Hogan and his wife, Yumi Hogan, negotiated to buy from South Korea are not yet available to local health officials, but could be next week, Kalyanaram­an said.

Nursing homes are waiting to learn how it will all work.

“We were told on Thursday that the state was working on a plan and there would be further guidance forthcomin­g,” said Kevin Heffner, CEO of LifeSpan Network, an associatio­n representi­ng 250 senior care provider organizati­ons in Maryland and Washington, D.C. “We don’t have any more informatio­n other than what we were told on Thursday.”

And some local health officials are also still seeking details.

“Broader testing may have indeed begun, but locally, we don’t know the criteria f or choosing where/ how testing teams are deployed,” said Lisa DeHernande­z, a spokeswoma­n for the Howard County Health Department.

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