Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

• Some want nursing homes excluded from reopening formula,

- By Angela Couloumbis Spotlight PA is an independen­t, nonpartisa­n newsroom powered by The Philadelph­ia Inquirer in partnershi­p with the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette and PennLive/ Patriot-News.

HARRISBURG — As the coronaviru­s continues to tear through Pennsylvan­ia’s nursing and personal care homes, pressure is mounting on the Wolf administra­tion to exclude those cases when deciding which counties can relax restrictio­ns so people can begin resuming some of the normal patterns of daily life.

Officials in some counties with surging numbers of care home deaths have suggested that the administra­tion should adjust its criteria for reopening. This week, they were joined by several state lawmakers, who raised the prospect at legislativ­e hearings and in letters to the governor.

But some public health officials caution that removing those numbers from the equation for reopening could have devastatin­g implicatio­ns for some of the state’s most vulnerable residents, who could be even more at risk of dying from the virus should an area open prematurel­y.

Care homes are highly contained clusters of people who are most susceptibl­e to complicati­ons and death from the virus, making its presence there much easier to detect. That could skew the data to make it appear as though it’s out of step with the general population.

But since the state still knows very little about the spread of the virus throughout Pennsylvan­ia as a whole — having tested just 2% of the population — a comparison is difficult to make.

“I think there is a falseness to how those numbers are being interprete­d,” said Chrysan Cronin, director and professor of public health at Muhlenberg College, noting that state officials have prioritize­d testing for people who exhibit symptoms as well as for front-line health workers.

Adam Marles, president and CEO of LeadingAge PA, which represents more than 365 nonprofit nursing homes, said the greatest threat to seniors in longterm care settings as communitie­s reopen will be “asymptomat­ic employees coming into work, unaware they may be sick and creating new infections in these settings, because the people who live there are so vulnerable.”

“Until we have widespread testing, the risk won’t diminish,” he said.

State officials so far have rejected calls to exclude what is happening inside nursing homes. Health Secretary Dr. Rachel Levine said this week that although the majority of the reported deaths have occurred inside nursing homes, residents there do not make up the lion’s share of the state’s more than 54,000 positive cases. Those, she said, are happening in the community.

The state is using a colorcoded, three-tiered system for reopening counties. A key benchmark to lifting a stay-at-home order and resuming some business operations is that counties or regions report fewer than 50 new COVID-19 cases per 100,000 people over 14 days in a row.

The first 24 counties, most in the northern and northweste­rn part of the state, entered the yellow phase Friday, meaning certain businesses could reopen with restrictio­ns. The governor announced that 13 more counties in the Pittsburgh region will move to the yellow phase next Friday.

But in more densely populated regions that have been harder hit by the virus, such as Philadelph­ia and its collar counties, it could be many weeks before they can meet the threshold to begin emerging from lockdown.

Those areas, according to state health data, have some of the highest numbers of reported care home deaths. In Montgomery County, 429 care home residents have died, accounting for 83% of the county’s deaths.

About 35% of the county’s positive cases have been among seniors in those facilities, according to data released daily by the state Department of Health.

Similarly, in Delaware County, about a quarter of the county’s 4,680 total cases have been among long-term care residents, but nearly 300 of the 382 people who have died were living in nursing homes or similar facilities.

Earlier this week, the Delaware County Council urged Mr. Wolf to exclude the number of new cases in nursing homes from the overall total when making a reopening decision. And in Bucks County, officials recently appealed to Mr. Wolf for flexibilit­y. Although they did not specifical­ly ask him to discard the high rate of infection among the county’s nursing home population, they wanted him to ease his requiremen­t for a specific downward trajectory of cases over 14 days.

During a virtual news conference Thursday, Bucks County officials noted that their county, which has its own health department, is doing extensive contact tracing, and it shows that community spread outside nursing homes is decreasing.

“What’s really important is that we look at who gets sick and why,” said David C. Damsker, who heads the

Bucks County Health Department. “So the number ‘50 per 100,000’ is arbitrary . ... We are looking at the trends, we are looking at who is getting sick, and that tells us a lot more about what is going on in Bucks County than any specific number.”

Dr. Damsker said another important metric is hospital capacity, including the number of available ventilator­s. He also said the county’s overall rate of infections is on its way down.

“That’s the informatio­n you look at as a whole,” he said.

During a state Senate hearing this week, Val Arkoosh, a physician who chairs Montgomery County’s Board of Commission­ers, said she believes it is not appropriat­e, on a fundamenta­l level, to discount positive cases in long-term care facilities.

“First of all, they are human beings,” Dr. Arkoosh told a panel of senators. “And I worry about ever saying someone shouldn’t be counted. That bothers me as a physician on a number of moral and ethical planks.”

 ?? David Maialetti/Philadelph­ia Inquirer ?? A protester walks by a restaurant open for takeout only on April 20 as protesters gathered outside the Capital Complex in Harrisburg to demand that Gov. Tom Wolf lift COVID-19 restrictio­ns on businesses in the state.
David Maialetti/Philadelph­ia Inquirer A protester walks by a restaurant open for takeout only on April 20 as protesters gathered outside the Capital Complex in Harrisburg to demand that Gov. Tom Wolf lift COVID-19 restrictio­ns on businesses in the state.

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