East Bay Times

Local: Finally — some good news for nursing home residents.

Vaccinatio­ns have reduced new cases in facilities that once were hotbeds for virus

- By Barbara Feder Ostrov

After a devastatin­g sweep that killed more than 9,000 residents and workers, COVID-19 has nearly disappeare­d from California’s nursing homes.

At the height of the winter surge, more than 80 residents of nursing facilities died every day from COVID-19. In March, however, fewer than 15 new cases were reported each day, and deaths dropped to between one and six people daily, according to the California Department of Public Health.

Health experts credit a massive nationwide campaign to vaccinate elderly and frail residents and their caregivers. About 87% of the 85,000 people who live in California’s skilled nursing facilities have been fully vaccinated, according to the state health agency.

“There is no question whatsoever that the vaccine has made a huge difference,” said Dr. Mike Wasserman, a geriatrici­an and past president of the California Associatio­n of Long Term Care Medicine. “When you have a nursing home that is fully vaccinated, the residents are protected, and we are seeing a dramatic decrease in cases and deaths.”

Deaths and infections also have declined in California’s more than 7,400 assisted living centers and other long-term care facilities. About 3,700 residents and staff there have died from COVID-19. Over the past week, there have been 223 active COVID-19 cases.

Nationwide, COVID-19 cases in skilled nursing and assisted living facilities have dropped 96% since Dec. 20, according to a report released Tuesday by two long-term care

industry groups.

Long-term care residents were first in line for vaccinatio­ns, along with health care workers, for the nation’s first, scarce doses of vaccines. More than 830,000 COVID-19 vaccine doses have been administer­ed to residents and workers at nursing homes, assisted living facilities and group homes, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. That’s more than any other state.

For many long-term care residents, the pandemic’s ultimate toll remains grim, with higher rates of depression, incontinen­ce and weight loss linked to longterm social isolation, according to a new study.

Now California’s nursing homes are cautiously reopening. At some homes, fully vaccinated residents now can dine together in small groups, receive visitors and meet for group activities.

After a year of window visits, Ouida and David Dill reunited indoors last Monday for the first time since the lockdown a year ago at the Lincoln Glen Nursing Facility in San Jose, where David has lived for more than four years.

Ouida Dill was allowed into a community room to see her husband of 60 years, seated in a wheelchair with a bright red and yellow plaid blanket on his lap.

“It was exhilarati­ng,” said Ouida Dill, 79. “Even though he was sleepy, I could tell it was a positive thing. It just feels more like normal.”

But as she read Shel Silverstei­n’s poems to her husband, they had to remain at least 6 feet apart. While she is fully vaccinated, her husband is not. The 83-year-old former satellite test engineer contracted COVID-19 during the nursing home’s outbreak, giving him some immunity, but because of the type of treatment he received, he cannot be vaccinated until mid-April, Ouida Dill said.

She said that her husband, who cannot walk and suffers from dementia, regressed somewhat during his year of isolation. Before the pandemic, she ate at least one meal with him on most days.

The nursing home where David Dill lives managed to avoid COVID-19 through most of the pandemic, according to administra­tor Rebecca Turner. But it was struck during the winter surge with an outbreak that infected 47 residents and killed 14.

Even as long-term care homes reopen, family members and health experts remain concerned about the number of workers who have been vaccinated, as they have been a primary conduit for infections.

Turner said about 72% of its residents and nearly all caregivers have been vaccinated, although some of her workers were hesitant at first.

Statewide, about 88% of workers in skilled nursing facilities have been fully vaccinated, according to state data. But that drops to only 65% of workers when other long-term care centers, such as assisted living homes, are included, according to federal data.

Wasserman, the geriatrici­an, said state officials need to ensure that new patients and staff have access to vaccines and any boosters after the end of the federal long-term care vaccinatio­n campaign this winter. Fortunatel­y, pharmacies that serve long-term care facilities now can get vaccinatio­ns directly through the federal government, he said.

“I think we are taking a short moment to feel relieved. And then we’re starting to worry again,” Wasserman said. “We’re not worried about the next three months. We’re worried about what comes after. If we are not prepared, we could go through this again.”

 ??  ??
 ?? ANNE WERNIKOFF — CALMATTERS ?? Ouida and David Dill recently sit separated by 6 feet because he is not yet vaccinated against COVID-19. After a year of window visits at the Lincoln Glen Nursing Facility in San Jose where David lives, “I can’t wait to just be able to touch him,” his wife said.
ANNE WERNIKOFF — CALMATTERS Ouida and David Dill recently sit separated by 6 feet because he is not yet vaccinated against COVID-19. After a year of window visits at the Lincoln Glen Nursing Facility in San Jose where David lives, “I can’t wait to just be able to touch him,” his wife said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States