Chattanooga Times Free Press

Coronaviru­s cases drop at nursing homes

- BY JAY REEVES

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Coronaviru­s cases have dropped at U.S. nursing homes and other longterm care facilities over the past few weeks, offering a glimmer of hope that health officials attribute to the start of vaccinatio­ns, an easing of the postholida­y surge and better prevention, among other reasons.

More than 153,000 residents of the country’s nursing homes and assisted living centers have died of COVID-19, accounting for 36% of the U.S. pandemic death toll, according to the COVID Tracking Project. Many of the roughly 2 million people who live at such facilities remain cut off from loved ones because of the risk of infection. The virus still kills thousands of them weekly.

The overall trend for long-term care residents is improving, though, with fewer new cases recorded and fewer facilities reporting outbreaks. Coupled with better figures for the country overall, it’s cause for optimism even if it’s too early to declare victory.

“We definitely think there’s hope and there’s light at the end of the tunnel,” said Marty Wright, who heads a nursing home trade group in West Virginia.

Nursing homes have been a priority since vaccinatio­ns began in mid-December, and the federal government says 1.5 million long-term care residents have already received at least an initial dose.

Researcher­s and industry leaders say they are seeing marked improvemen­ts after months in which some nursing homes lost dozens of residents to the disease and had to keep others in semi-isolation for protection. Some 2,000 nursing homes are now virus-free, or about 13% nationally, according to an industry group, and many are dealing with far fewer cases than before.

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