Hartford Courant

Cases down in nursing homes

High vaccinatio­n rates ‘absolutely’ reducing risk, health expert says

- By Alex Putterman

COVID-19 cases in Connecticu­t nursing homes were down sharply for the second straight week, state numbers showed Thursday, possibly due to high rates of vaccinatio­n among residents there.

The state reported 238 new nursing-home cases from Jan. 13-19, down about 24% from the week prior and about 50% from the week before that. Keith Grant, Hartford HealthCare’s senior system director for infection prevention, said vaccine distributi­on has likely played a role in that trend, noting that patients begin to develop antibodies even after just one vaccine dose.

“An individual who has never had the vaccine vs. an individual who has the vaccine, it reduces your risk exponentia­lly,” Grant said. “Do I think it’s had an effect? Absolutely.”

Josh Geballe, the state’s chief operating officer, noted that the vaccine takes time to be effective and said the recent trend in nursing home numbers could also owe to “rigorous testing [and] the infection control efforts that the [Department of Public Health] teams are making across the state.”

Residents of all 213 Connecticu­t nursing homes received their first vaccine doses by Jan. 8, state officials said, and now many have also received their second dose, which confers immunity within two weeks in about 95% of recipients.

Officials say more than 85% of nursing home residents have

accepted the vaccine, a much higher rate than reported in other groups. That means, Grant said, that mortality in nursing homes should drop considerab­ly over the coming weeks.

“[Vaccinatio­n] should have a significan­t impact,” Grant said. “We should be looking at mortality rates that drop by 80 or 90%.”

For now, large numbers of people continue to die in state nursing homes. The state reported 110 deaths in Connecticu­t nursing homes from Jan. 13-19, up from the previous week and about in line with typical numbers over the past month. Given the time it typically takes for COVID19 patients to die from the disease, those victims likely contracted the virus before vaccinatio­n began or took effect.

Connecticu­t nursing homes have now recorded more 13,000 COVID-19 cases and 3,841 deaths, more than half the state’s total.

As Geballe noted, nursing home residents would not become fully immune to COVID-19 until five or six weeks after their initial vaccine doses. Vaccinatio­ns began at nursing homes the week of Dec. 21., making staff and residents there among the first in the state to get their shots. Anyone who was given their first dose that week would have received their second and final dose three weeks later, during the week of Jan. 11. Given that immunity takes about two weeks to set in, those patients would only now be gaining full protection against COVID-19.

Researcher­s believe, however, that both the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines are at least somewhat effective after a single dose, meaning some nursing home residents may have been protected as early as the beginning of January. This, Grant says, makes it likely that the vaccine has already made a noticeable difference.

Nursing home residents aren’t the only ones benefiting already from vaccine distributi­on. Health care workers have been vaccinated on a similar timeline, and residents 75 and older are currently receiving their first doses. .

Grant was one of the first people in Connecticu­t to be vaccinated, receiving his first shot during a ceremony on Dec. 21 and his second three weeks later on Jan. 4. Nearly three weeks after that, he considers himself safe.

“I’m sitting pretty right now,” Grant said. “My initial cohort you would consider to be between 94 and 96% protected right now.”

Grant notes that even the small minority of patients who contract COVID-19 after receiving the vaccine tend to have less serious symptoms and very low likelihood of death.

In total, Connecticu­t has now administer­ed at least one vaccine dose to 226,930 of its residents and both doses to 31,337 residents, according to state numbers. Those totals include about 15% of people from age 75-84 and more than 20% of those 85 and older.

Though not enough Connecticu­t residents have yet been vaccinated to make a dramatic difference in the state’s overall COVID-19 numbers, Gov. Ned Lamont pointed Thursday to a slight, recent drop in the coronaviru­s positivity rate and number of people hospitaliz­ed with the virus.

“Some of that, I think, is thanks to the vaccinatio­n program rolling out,” Lamont said.

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