Houston Chronicle

State calls on firefighte­rs to help with testing at nursing homes

Multi-agency effort seeks to have over 200,000 residents, staff checked and care facilities inspected

- By Emily Foxhall, Taylor Goldenstei­n and Jordan Rubio STAFF WRITERS

Firefighte­rs and paramedics across Texas have been tapped to help with coronaviru­s testing in nursing homes, as state and local officials work through how to meet Gov. Greg Abbott’s directive to test more than 200,000 residents and staff.

Fire department­s statewide are being asked to help with facility inspection­s and on-site testing, as part of a multi-agency effort, according to a Texas Department of

State Health Services email shared with Hearst Newspapers, offering details on the state’s plan.

Abbott announced Monday that state agencies would begin outlining how to conduct testing in all nursing homes following White House recommenda­tions. But he did not offer details then on how the state planned to carry out the massive undertakin­g.

It took two months for the state to test just over 535,000 residents, though a national scarcity of testing materials slowed the effort. Now firefighte­rs are mobilizing to administer what could be 230,000 tests in just two weeks.

The federal government is sending as many as 750,000 test kits to the state, said Darrell Pile, CEO of the Southeast Texas Regional Advisory Council, which was encouragin­g its partner EMS agencies to identify staff to help the testing teams.

“It is daunting,” Pile said. “However, we’re very mature, seasoned emergency providers who have thought about these situations. … We’re all ready and willing to evolve and go beyond our normal duties to help.”

Letters to the facilities issued Wednesday said they would be contacted “very soon” by a testing team that could include first responders or the Texas National Guard. Abbott on Friday issued a statement thanking the firefighte­rs for their help.

Local officials continued to work out over the course of the week exactly how this testing might work, pushing for clarificat­ion from the state about its broad demands.

Firefighte­rs are “proud to be on the front lines on the pandemic response,” Texas State Associatio­n of Fire Fighters President John Riddle wrote in a statement. But he questioned whether all had access to needed tests and training, and he urged the state to clarify response protocols.

“No matter what, we’ll be there when the call comes in,” Riddle wrote. “We just want to ensure we can deliver excellent service as safely as possible.”

Even with visitor restrictio­ns and employee screenings in place, an alarming number of nursing home residents have died. As of Friday, 490 such residents’ deaths were related to COVID-19. More than a quarter of licensed nursing homes had at least one case.

The ability of nursing homes to test — an effort that can help prevent asymptomat­ic employees from spreading the illness — so far has seemed “to be a mixed bag,” said Amanda Fredriksen, associate state director for advocacy and outreach at AARP Texas.

“We’ve been talking to counties and cities, and there’s a fair bit of variabilit­y about how accessible tests are and also their procedures for getting those tests processed,” Fredriksen said.

Fredriksen said it will be important that test results are returned fairly quickly, as well as that tests are repeated.

The Texas Health and Human Services Commission said in a statement that “nursing facility residents are among the most atrisk for infection, and the expansion of testing to all residents and staff will provide a full picture of the scope and extent of infection at facilities statewide.”

In Harris County, where a team has already been testing in longterm care facilities, fire department­s and paramedics agreed to help with facility assessment­s. The dozens of department­s would contribute as they felt comfortabl­e in evaluating nursing homes’ policies and preparedne­ss, said Mike Mulligan, executive board president of the Harris County Firefighte­rs Associatio­n.

Firefighte­rs already plan for handling fires in such facilities, Mulligan said, so he considered this pre-planning with a medical twist.

“This is an evolving situation,” he said. “Everybody that’s working on this is really just trying to be sure that we’re protecting all of the citizens that we’re responsibl­e for to the best of our ability.”

In Montgomery County, hospital district paramedics have been testing in a handful of nursing homes that wanted it and — as part of an existing statewide initiative — testing in high-risk regional facilities, said James Campbell, the district’s EMS chief.

Firefighte­rs in the county were already in touch about how they could support the paramedics doing this work.

“We want to be able to help anytime that we’re called upon by the state,” Campbell said. “We’re trained. We’re ready.”

In counties without a paid fire department, the state military, as well as state emergency medical teams, will have to fill the gap. Brazoria County Judge Matt Sebesta said he expects the Texas National Guard to do most of its nursing home testing.

Still, the county may be in better shape than others because of recent testing — the state will not require testing for those that can show they have already done so in the last 30 days.

Houston firefighte­rs Thursday awaited instructio­ns from the city on updated testing protocols, said Marty Lancton, president of the Houston Profession­al Fire Fighters Associatio­n.

“In the end, nothing’s changed with Houston firefighte­rs and paramedics — we’re always ready to help the residents and staff of nursing homes,” he said. “If we’re asked to do more for them, we’ll gladly be there to help.”

Details were shaking out, too, in other counties. “Plans are evolving,” wrote Ashley Tompkins, spokespers­on for the Galveston County Health District. Fort Bend County Judge K.P. George said in a statement that the county was “working 24/7 on establishi­ng this Strike Team to meet this goal.”

With 161 nursing homes in the eight-county Houston region, the clock was ticking.

 ?? Mark Mulligan / Staff photograph­er ?? Montgomery County Hospital District paramedics conduct COVID-19 tests outside Focused Care at Beechnut in Houston.
Mark Mulligan / Staff photograph­er Montgomery County Hospital District paramedics conduct COVID-19 tests outside Focused Care at Beechnut in Houston.
 ?? Mark Mulligan / Staff photograph­er ?? State health officials say expanding testing to all nursing homes will give a full picture of the scope of infection at Texas facilities.
Mark Mulligan / Staff photograph­er State health officials say expanding testing to all nursing homes will give a full picture of the scope of infection at Texas facilities.

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