Hartford Courant

Some nursing homes far behind in race to immunize workers

Half of state facilities report rates below 75% as deadline looms

- By Jenna Carlesso By Kasturi Pananjady

Nursing homes in Connecticu­t are racing to vaccinate all of their workers against the coronaviru­s before the state-imposed deadline in September, but some face a greater challenge than others:

Half of the 204 Connecticu­t nursing homes that are reporting data have staff immunizati­on rates below 75%, and a handful are under 50%.

Gov. Ned Lamont’s administra­tion has mandated that nursing home workers receive at least one dose of the coronaviru­s vaccine — and be scheduled for a second — by Sept. 7, or their facilities could face fines of $20,000 per day.

Over the last nine months, in an attempt to stave off another devastatin­g COVID-19 surge, several nursing home leaders have taken it upon themselves to implement their own vaccinatio­n requiremen­ts for staff. Dozens of others had called on the state to adopt an industry-wide edict, fearing staff shortages or worrying that employees would depart for jobs at other facilities.

Some tried to incentiviz­e workers with prizes or cash bonuses. Others held staff conversati­ons about the vaccine, with medical experts on hand to answer questions.

The efforts were met with mixed success. Although the statewide average for nursing home staff vaccinatio­ns is 74%, some facilities have achieved much higher participat­ion among workers, and others are much lower.

Federal data show that the range of staff vaccinatio­n rates among individual nursing homes varies widely, from 37% to 100%.

The push to boost immunizati­ons comes at a critical time. Nursing home staff and residents have seen COVID-19 cases rise steeply over the past few weeks. The state reported 118 resident cases and 97 staff cases between Aug. 4 and Aug. 17. The previous month, Connecticu­t recorded just six resident cases and 19 staff cases between July 7 and July 20.

Here’s a look at the highest and lowest vaccinatio­n rates among health care staff at nursing homes and what strategies administra­tors say have encouraged the highest participat­ion:

Chestelm Health & Rehabilita­tion Center in Moodus is ranked No. 1 among Connecticu­t facilities, with 100% of workers fully vaccinated, according to federal data from the week of Aug. 8.

Autumn Lake Healthcare at Bucks Hill in Waterbury was No. 2, with 99.3% of employees vaccinated.

Manchester Manor in its namesake town is No. 3, with a 98.5% participat­ion rate.

Jewish Senior Services in Bridgeport is No. 4, with 97.4% of the staff participat­ing.

Newtown Rehabilita­tion & Health Care Center is No. 5, with 97.1% of workers vaccinated.

And The Suffield House is ranked No. 6, with a 96.4% participat­ion rate among staff.

 ?? COURANT FILE PHOTO ?? The Reservoir nursing home housekeepi­ng employee Frank Tirado gets the Pfizer Biontech COVID-19 vaccine in West Hartford in December. Gov. Ned Lamont’s administra­tion has mandated that nursing home workers receive at least one dose of the coronaviru­s vaccine — and be scheduled for a second — by Sept. 7, or their facilities could face fines of $20,000 per day.
COURANT FILE PHOTO The Reservoir nursing home housekeepi­ng employee Frank Tirado gets the Pfizer Biontech COVID-19 vaccine in West Hartford in December. Gov. Ned Lamont’s administra­tion has mandated that nursing home workers receive at least one dose of the coronaviru­s vaccine — and be scheduled for a second — by Sept. 7, or their facilities could face fines of $20,000 per day.

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