COVID-19 nursing home cases fall.
Two weeks after Connecticut completed its first round of vaccinations at nursing homes, newly reported cases of COVID-19 there have declined, but a state official said it’s too early to draw a conclusion.
The state’s nursing homes reported 238 new cases of the virus in residents this week, down 23 percent from the week before, and a little more than half the 483 cases reported on Jan. 7.
That week, Gov. Ned Lamont appeared in front of LiveWell, a long-term care facility in Plantsville, to announce the state had completed its first round of vaccinations at nursing homes.
According to Lamont, that made Connecticut the first state in the country to complete its vaccine clinics at nursing homes. It came just three weeks after vaccinations began at nursing homes, starting with The Reservoir in West Hartford.
But Josh Geballe, Lamont’s chief operating officer and frequent data expert on his coronavirus press conferences, said Thursday the “time lag’ involved in vaccinations and testing mean it’s unlikely the decline is the result of the vaccine.
“I think maybe we’re starting to see a little bit of a benefit from the vaccinations
starting to creep in,” said Geballe.
“But the reality is when you do the math from when that first set of doses was administered in those first nursing homes starting around December 21, you go 10 to 14 days after that when you start to get some protection
from the vaccine, then potentially being tested let’s say the week after that, then those test results starting to show up in the data— the time lag is considerable,” he explained.
Geballe credited the work inside of nursing homes to prevent the virus from
spreading, including inspections of nursing homes by staff from the Department of Public Health, who have been backed up by National Guard personnel.
The number of new COVID-19 cases among nursing home staff also fell, with 190 new cases reported this
week compared with 362 on Jan. 7. Lamont has raised concern about hesitancy among nursing staff to take the vaccine, while he has said the residents have overwhelmingly agreed to get the shot. Nursing home staff were offered the vaccine alongside residents in clinics run by staff from CVS and Walgreens.
Deaths of nursing home residents attributed to the virus have also decreased slightly from two weeks ago, down from 111 on Jan. 7 to 92 this week, but also rose slightly from the number of deaths reported last week.
On Friday, 45 more deaths attributed to the virus were reported statewide, pushing the death toll in Connecticut to 6,819.
Another 2,019 infections were reported, found in 40,958 additional tests for a daily positivity rate of 4.93 percent.
Hospitalizations fell to the lowest point since the beginning of January, with a net 11 fewer patients bringing the statewide total to 1,058.
Connecticut is currently also vaccinating those 75 and older who do not live in long term care facilities as part of Phase 1A of the vaccine rollout. Nursing home staff and residents, medical first responders and health care workers were included in the first wave, known as Phase 1A.
The state expects to begin vaccinating aged 65 to 74 in the coming weeks. State officials have said the timeline is subject to the supply of the two federally-approved vaccines allocated by the federal government, and demand for the vaccine from those who are eligible.