The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Cuomo: N.Y. should have released care home death data faster

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NEW YORK — Under fire over his management of the coronaviru­s’ lethal path through New York’s nursing homes, Gov. Andrew Cuomo insisted Monday the state didn’t cover up deaths but acknowledg­ed that officials should have moved faster to release some informatio­n sought by lawmakers, the public and the press.

“All the deaths in the nursing homes and hospitals were always fully, publicly and accurately reported,” the Democratic governor said, weeks after the state was forced to acknowledg­e that its count of nursing home deaths excluded thousands of residents who perished after being taken to hospitals. He explained the matter Monday as a difference of “categoriza­tion,” with the state counting where deaths occurred and others seeking total deaths of nursing home residents, regardless of the location.

“We should have done a better job of providing as much informatio­n as we could as quickly as we could,” he said. “No excuses: I accept responsibi­lity for that.”

Cuomo, who has seen his image as a pandemic-taming leader dented by a series of disclosure­s involving nursing homes in recent weeks, said he would propose reforms involving nursing homes and hospitals in the upcoming state budget, without giving details.

But he continued to blame a “toxic political environmen­t,” and “disinforma­tion” for much of the criticism surroundin­g his administra­tion’s handling of the issue.

State lawmakers have been calling for investigat­ions, stripping Cuomo of his emergency powers and even his resignatio­n after new details emerged this week about why certain nursing home data wasn’t disclosed for months, despite requests from lawmakers and others.

First, a report late last month from Democratic state Attorney General Letitia James examined the administra­tion’s failure to tally nursing home residents’ deaths at hospitals. The state then acknowledg­ed the total number of long-term care residents’ deaths is nearly 15,000, up from the 8,500 previously disclosed.

Next, in reply to a Freedom of Informatio­n request from the Associated Press in May, the state Health Department released records this week showing that more than 9,000 recovering coronaviru­s patients in New York were released from hospitals into nursing homes in the pandemic’s early months — over 40 percent higher than the state had said previously, because it wasn’t counting residents who returned from hospitals to homes where they already had lived.

Then it emerged that top Cuomo aide Melissa DeRosa had told Democratic lawmakers that the tally of nursing home residents’ deaths at hospitals — data that legislator­s had sought since August — was delayed because officials worried that the informatio­n was “going to be used against us” by the Trump administra­tion’s Department of Justice.

Echoing an explanatio­n DeRosa gave Friday, Cuomo said the state was slow to respond to the lawmakers because officials prioritize­d dealing with requests from the Justice Department and were busy dealing with the work of the pandemic: “It’s not like people were in the South of France,” he said.

“When we didn’t provide informatio­n, it allowed press, people, cynics, politician­s, to fill the void,” he said, and “it created confusion and cynicism and pain for the families.”

“The truth is: Everybody did everything they could.”

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