Kuwait Times

Inside Connecticu­t’s ‘ground war’ against virus at nursing homes

Coronaviru­s death toll mounts

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BRIDGEPORT: On Main Street in Bridgeport, Connecticu­t, across the road from a hospital grappling with the coronaviru­s crisis, a nondescrip­t brick building is playing a key role in the state’s plan to free up acute-care beds and protect its ailing nursing homes. Over the past week, the Northbridg­e Health Care Center has taken in 46 patients who have recuperate­d enough from COVID-19 - the disease caused by the virus - to be discharged from a local hospital but are still contagious. Understand­ably, their long-term care facilities were anxious about readmittin­g them.

The use of two floors at Northbridg­e to care exclusivel­y for patients with COVID-19 is part of Connecticu­t’s “ground war” against a problem vexing officials across the United States: where to send recovering patients who might still infect others if returned to their original place of care, said Barbara Cass, a state health department official who oversees nursing homes.

The state is building a network of such facilities to act as a kind of step-down unit upon discharge from a hospital that could eventually accommodat­e more than 1,000 people. While they will take in an array of patients, a primary focus is protecting nursing homes, which account for as much as half of the coronaviru­s-related deaths in the state. “Thirty days into this, there is still lots of fear and lots of unknowns,” Cass said in an interview. “The overall goal is to address the surge in hospitals, so that someone who arrives at hospital that is acutely ill can have a bed.” How states approach this challenge could determine how well they quell the growing crisis at long-term care facilities, which are breeding grounds for the highly contagious virus given the vulnerable older age of the residents, close living quarters and shared staff. While New York has mandated facilities take back coronaviru­s patients discharged from a hospital as long as they can provide adequate care, Connecticu­t is among a handful of states seeking to sidestep that risk.

It has tapped Northbridg­e and six other nursing facilities as COVID-19 recovery centers, with seven more being considered. To date, 119 patients have been transferre­d to the three sites currently open, a spokesman for the health department said. Andrea Iacomacci, senior manager of care coordinati­on at Bridgeport Hospital, said while a few nursing homes have started taking back patients, she has sent about 10 to Northbridg­e and would send more there in the coming weeks. The transfers have helped the hospital reduce its number of COVID-19 patients to 191 from a peak of 225 a week ago, she said.

Similarly, St Vincent’s Medical Center has sent eight COVID-19 patients across Main Street to Northbridg­e, among the dozens who have been cycled out of Hartford HealthCare’s seven hospitals who would otherwise have had remain until they tested negative for the virus. “We have people who were essentiall­y sitting in the hospital waiting for negative testing to be transition­ed to a nursing facility,” said David Santoro, vice president of business operations at Hartford HealthCare Integrated Care Partners. “This is a way to get the patients moving to a lower level of care.”

‘It’s in our buildings’ According to a survey of data by ABC News published on Friday, there have been at least 10,631 coronaviru­s-related deaths among long-term care residents, about a fifth of fatalities nationwide. Data released by Connecticu­t on Friday underscore­d the depth of its crisis, with 768 coronaviru­s deaths attributed to nursing home residents as of April 22, accounting for a staggering 50% of COVID-19 fatalities. Interviews with more than a dozen people involved with Connecticu­t’s plan revealed the challenges they faced in settling on a strategy, especially following new guidance from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) last month. — Reuters

 ?? — AFP ?? CONNECTICU­T: A ‘prone team’, wearing personal protective equipment (PPE), turns a COVID-19 patient onto his stomach in a Stamford Hospital intensive care unit (ICU) in Stamford, Connecticu­t.
— AFP CONNECTICU­T: A ‘prone team’, wearing personal protective equipment (PPE), turns a COVID-19 patient onto his stomach in a Stamford Hospital intensive care unit (ICU) in Stamford, Connecticu­t.

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