Marin Independent Journal

NY officials removed fuller tally of nursing home deaths

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Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s administra­tion insisted Friday that a quest for scientific accuracy, not political concerns, prompted members of his COVID-19 task force to ask the state health department to delete data last summer from a report on nursing home patients killed by the coronaviru­s.

The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times, citing documents and people with knowledge of the administra­tion’s internal discussion­s, reported late Thursday that aides including secretary to the governor Melissa DeRosa pushed state health officials to edit the July report so it counted only residents who died inside long-term care facilities, and not those who died later after being transferre­d to a hospital.

At the time, Cuomo was trying to deflect criticism that his administra­tion hadn’t done enough to protect nursing home residents from the virus. About a third of the state’s nursing home fatalities were excluded from the report as a result of the change.

The revelation­s about the removal of the higher fatality number come as the Democrat also faces accusation­s he sexually harassed two former aides and a woman that he met at a wedding.

Cuomo had apologized Wednesday for acting “in a way that made people feel uncomforta­ble” but rejected calls for his resignatio­n and said he would fully cooperate with the state attorney general’s investigat­ion into the sexual harassment allegation­s. Federal investigat­ors are scrutinizi­ng his administra­tion’s handling of nursing home data.

Top Democrats

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the state have said they want those investigat­ions to conclude before they make a judgment about Cuomo’s conduct, but in the wake of Thursday night’s report, a few state lawmakers renewed calls for the governor to either resign or be ousted.

“And Cuomo hid the numbers. Impeach,” tweeted Queens Assembly member Ron Kim, who said Cuomo bullied him over the nursing home response.

White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said Friday that the allegation­s that Cuomo aides manipulate­d public reporting of nursing home deaths were “troubling” and said the White House “certainly would support any outside investigat­ion.”

The July nursing home report was released to rebut criticism of Cuomo over a March 25 directive that barred nursing homes from rejecting recovering coronaviru­s patients being discharged from hospitals. Some nursing homes complained at the time that the policy could help spread the virus.

The report concluded the policy played no role in spreading infection.

The state’s analysis was based partly on what officials acknowledg­ed at the time was an imprecise statistic. The report said 6,432 people had died in the state’s nursing homes.

State officials acknowledg­ed even then that the true number of deaths was higher because the report was excluding patients who died in hospitals.

But they declined at the time to give any estimate of that larger number of deaths, saying the numbers still needed to be verified.

In fact, the original drafts of the report had included that number, then more than 9,200 deaths, until Cuomo’s aides said it should be taken out.

State officials insisted Thursday that the edits were made because of concerns about accuracy.

“While early versions of the report included out of facility deaths, the COVID task force was not satisfied that the data had been verified against hospital data and so the final report used only data for in facility deaths, which was disclosed in the report,” said Department of Health Spokespers­on Gary Holmes.

The governor’s office didn’t respond to questions about whether Cuomo himself was involved in removing the higher death total from the report.

Scientists, health care profession­als and elected officials assailed the report at the time for flawed methodolog­y and selective stats that sidesteppe­d the actual impact of the directive.

The administra­tion refused for months to release more complete data. A court order and state attorney general report in January forced the state to acknowledg­e the nursing home resident death toll was higher than the count previously made public.

DeRosa told lawmakers earlier this month that the administra­tion didn’t turn over the data to legislator­s in August because of worries the informatio­n would be used against them by President Donald Trump’s administra­tion.

“Basically, we froze, because then we were in a position where we weren’t sure if what we were going to give to the Department of Justice or what we give to you guys, what we start saying was going to be used against us while we weren’t sure if there was going to be an investigat­ion,” DeRosa said.

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