The Day

AG: New York undercount­ed nursing home deaths by thousands

- By MARINA VILLENEUVE, BERNARD CONDON and MATT SEDENSKY

Albany, N.Y. — New York may have undercount­ed COVID-19 deaths among nursing home residents by thousands, the state attorney general charged in a report Thursday that dealt a blow to Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s oft-repeated claims that his state is doing better than others in protecting its most vulnerable.

The 76-page report found an undercount of more than 50%, backing up the findings of an Associated Press investigat­ion last year that focused on the fact that New York is one of the only states in the nation that count residents who died on nursing home property and not those who later died in hospitals.

Such an undercount would mean the state’s current official tally of 8,711 nursing home deaths to the virus is actually more than 13,000, boosting New York from No. 6 to highest in the nation.

“While we cannot bring back the individual­s we lost to this crisis, this report seeks to offer transparen­cy that the public deserves,” Attorney General Letitia James said in a statement.

The report from a fellow Democratic official undercut Cuomo’s frequent argument that the criticism of his handling of the virus in nursing homes was part of a political “blame game,” and it was a vindicatio­n for thousands of families who believed their loved ones were being omitted from counts to advance the governor’s image as a pandemic hero.

“It’s important to me that my mom was counted,” said Vivian Zayas, whose 78-yearold mother died in April after contractin­g COVID-19 at a nursing home in West Islip, N.Y. “Families like mine knew these numbers were not correct.”

Cuomo’s office and the state health department have not responded to repeated requests for comment.

James has for months been examining discrepanc­ies between the number of deaths being reported by the state’s Department of Health, and the number of deaths reported by the homes themselves.

Her investigat­ors looked at a sample of 62 of the state’s roughly 600 nursing homes. They reported 1,914 deaths of residents from COVID-19, while the state Department of Health logged only 1,229 deaths at those same facilities. One unnamed facility, for example, had an official death toll of 11 but the attorney general’s probe found that 40 had actually died.

AP’s analysis in August concluded that the state could be understati­ng deaths by as much as 65%, based on discrepanc­ies between its totals and numbers being reported to federal regulators. That analysis was, like James’ report, based on only a slice of data, rather than a comprehens­ive look.

To date, despite public records requests from the AP and repeated pleas from state and federal lawmakers, New York’s health department has yet to produce the full number of nursing home residents who died in hospitals as well as the nursing home property. Health Commission­er Howard Zucker has said several times that the state is working on such data.

State Sen. Gustavo Rivera, a Democrat who has blasted the Cuomo administra­tion for its incomplete death count, said he was “sadly unsurprise­d” by the report.

“Families who lost loved ones deserve honest answers,” Rivera said. “For their sake, I hope that this report will help us unveil the truth and put policies in place to prevent such tragedies in the future.”

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