Hartford Courant

Deaths, infections in nursing homes decline

Vaccinatio­ns may be providing signs of slowing spread of COVID-19 in Connecticu­t facilities

- By Dave Altimari

For the first time in several weeks, the number of COVID-19 deaths and infections in long-term care facilities in Connecticu­t decreased sharply — raising the possibilit­y that systematic vaccinatio­ns are curbing the virus’ deadly path through the state’s most vulnerable residents.

Over the week of Jan. 6-12, there were 85 deaths in nursing homes and 312 residents who were infected — both numbers lower than during previous weeks. For the period of Dec. 30 to Jan. 5, there were 120 deaths due to COVID-19 and 483 infections. The week before, there were 126 deaths and 382 infections.

“We don’t know where we are going to go from here — it could really go either way,” said Dr. Vivian Leung of the state Department of Public Health. “We are not relaxing now that the first doses of the vaccine have been given.”

Leung, who oversees the DPH’s Healthcare-Associated Infections and Antimicrob­ial Resistance Program, told a legislativ­e committee Thursday that despite the decrease, the state is still testing residents and staff at the same frequency and is doubling-down on infection control, especially with community spread still high — particular­ly in eastern Connecticu­t.

“There needs to be continued vigilance with infection control and rapid response, and we are continuing to do that at the department and in the facilities themselves until the community rates start to go down,” Leung said.

There have been several major outbreaks in long-term care facilities in eastern Connecticu­t recently. The Matulaitis nursing home in Putnam and Davis Place nursing home in Killingly have had 89 and 120 infections respective­ly over the past few weeks.

There also were 18 deaths at the Greentree Manor Nursing & Rehabilita­tion Center in Waterford, which has become the recovery home in Eastern Connecticu­t where other homes send their COVID-positive residents.

Matthew Barrett, the CEO of the Connecticu­t Associatio­n of Health Care Facilities, said that while the numbers look better, nursing homes and assisted living facilities “can’t let their guard down.”

“The vaccine is the clear pathway to the other side of the pandemic, but congregate settings like nursing homes and assisted living communitie­s will continue to struggle until our state tamps down community spread,” Barrett said.

CVS and Walgreens vaccinator­s have

started the second round of vaccines in nursing homes this week and are hoping to get through a second round at all 213 by the end of January.

The participat­ion in the vaccine program by residents has been very high — averaging over 90 percent — and providers have been waiting for the numbers of cases to decline because of that.

The state saw a steady increase in infections and deaths in long-term care facilities until the most recent report.

Overall, there have been 3,813 COVID-19 deaths in the state’s nursing homes since March or about 61% of all deaths in Connecticu­t.

The death rate has been significan­tly lower in longterm care facilities during the second wave of coronaviru­s infections over the past few months than it was in the spring.

 ?? STEPHEN DUNN/AP ?? Margaret Dubois, 87, a resident at The Reservoir nursing facility, was given the second COVID-19 vaccinatio­n in Dec. 18 in a West Hartford nursing home. Administer­ing the vaccine was Bob Atighechi, a CVS pharmacist from Rocky Hill. At right was Mary Lou Galushko, a CVS pharmacist form North Haven.
STEPHEN DUNN/AP Margaret Dubois, 87, a resident at The Reservoir nursing facility, was given the second COVID-19 vaccinatio­n in Dec. 18 in a West Hartford nursing home. Administer­ing the vaccine was Bob Atighechi, a CVS pharmacist from Rocky Hill. At right was Mary Lou Galushko, a CVS pharmacist form North Haven.

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