The Day

State is struggling to detail virus’ impact on assisted living centers

Efforts lag those of tracking virus in nursing homes

- By KEITH M. PHANEUF Keith M. Phaneuf is a reporter for The Connecticu­t Mirror (www. ctmirror.org). Copyright 2020 © The Connecticu­t Mirror. Police logs reflect arrests, not conviction­s. For the outcomes of criminal and motor vehicle arrests, visit bit.ly/

Gov. Ned Lamont's efforts to track the coronaviru­s' impact on the thousands of seniors in assisted living centers continues to have significan­t gaps after two weeks.

State health officials acknowledg­ed Friday that not all medical agencies that staff the centers have been reporting numbers in a timely fashion, and it remains unclear whether fatalities — which were excluded from the first two reports — would be disclosed next week either. By comparison, the Lamont administra­tion has been reporting COVID-19-related data among nursing home residents since April 7.

But both health officials and an industry representa­tive also said communicat­ion between all parties is strong and remained optimistic the new system would improve.

“I think the assisted living facilities are getting there, but they're used to being independen­t communitie­s,” said Barbara Cass, who heads the facility licensing and investigat­ions for the state Department of Public Health. “It's a new process for them. I think that has been the challenge.”

The Connecticu­t Assisted Living Associatio­n, which represents most of the medical service agencies staffing assisted living centers, “has a longstandi­ng history of working collaborat­ively with DPH,” said Christophe­r Carter, the associatio­n president.

“We're pleased to have worked with the department regarding the reporting requiremen­ts,” he added, “and to the extent enhancemen­ts are required relative to the data the state is receiving, CALA stands ready to support the department in that process.”

Assisted living residences serve residents age 55 and older who need some health, nursing or other assistance with daily living activities, but not necessaril­y the skilled care provided by a nursing home.

After a COVID-19 outbreak forced state and local health officials to dispatch additional medical personnel to a Stratford assisted living community on April 18-19, Lamont ordered these centers to disclose pandemic-related health statistics weekly to the state.

But the two assisted living reports Lamont has provided were significan­tly narrower in detail than administra­tion presentati­ons involving infections among nursing home residents.

Firstly, the reports offer no data on residents who died from the coronaviru­s.

Secondly, the assisted living reports — at least partially — were statistica­l snapshots in time, rather than based on cumulative data as nursing home presentati­ons have been.

For example, the first assisted living report, tallied on April 29, found that 662 residents either had tested or were presumed positive for COVID-19.

The second report, which was tallied on May 6, found 506 assisted living residents fell into these categories. But it offered no explanatio­n for the net decline of 156. It remains unclear whether the first tally, the second, or both were wrong or incomplete. Cass said some medical agencies serving assisted living centers were late in filing data.

State officials also haven't said whether residents counted in the first report — who later died or recovered — were removed from the second report.

Dr. Lynn Sosa, the deputy state epidemiolo­gist, said the medical agencies serving assisted living centers “have only been asked to report their present and confirmed cases in the building,” at least for initial reports. But DPH is working to create a better data collection program.

When asked whether coronaviru­s-related deaths among assisted living facility residents would be included in next week's report, Cass said it was uncertain.

‘The work is ongoing’

Part of the problem, state officials said, involves the very different nature of nursing homes and assisted living facilities.

Technicall­y the state doesn't even license assisted living facilities — that job belongs to the Assisted Living Service Agencies, or ALSA, that provide medical services for residents.

State regulation­s already require an ALSA to regularly assess residents' health conditions and refer them to appropriat­e medical providers when necessary. A registered nurse must be on call 24 hours a day.

And Cass noted that ALSAs generally have much a smaller staff than nursing homes, particular­ly if an assisted living complex has few residents with complicate­d medical conditions, such as dementia. An ALSA might be as small as a supervisin­g nurse and two or three more caregivers.

Another complicati­on, Cass said, is the mechanism used to collect data so far.

The state is asking medical service agencies to report using a mutual aid system created to share concerns about medical supplies and other issues. The Connecticu­t Hospital and Long Term Care Mutual Aid Plan involves most nursing homes and 11 hospitals, but fewer than half of the 111 assisted living medical service agencies licensed in Connecticu­t.

Groton City

Timothy M. Edwards, 34, of 30 Kamaha St. was charged Thursday with third-degree assault.

Waterford

Patrick Voelker, 29, of 10 Anchorage Road, Niantic, was charged Friday with driving under the influence of alcohol or drugs, driving without a license and failure to maintain lane.

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