Las Vegas Review-Journal

Nursing home deaths go beyond virus itself

‘Excess’ fatalities seen in statistica­l analysis

- By Matt Sedensky and Bernard Condon

As more than 90,000 of the nation’s long-term care residents have died in the coronaviru­s pandemic, advocates for seniors say a tandem wave of fatalities is quietly claiming tens of thousands more who are succumbing not to the virus but to neglect by overwhelme­d staffs and slow declines from isolation.

Nursing home watchdogs are being flooded with reports of residents kept in soiled diapers so long their skin peeled off, left with bedsores that cut to the bone and allowed to wither away in starvation or thirst.

Beyond that are swelling numbers of less clear-cut deaths that doctors believe have been fueled by despair and desperatio­n from being cut off from loved ones — listed on some death certificat­es as “failure to thrive.”

“What the pandemic did was uncover what was really going on in these facilities,” said June Linnertz, whose father died in June after she found him in what she said were putrid conditions at his Plymouth, Minnesota, assisted living facility. “It was bad before, but it got exponentia­lly worse.”

Stephen Kaye, a professor at the Institute on Health and Aging at the University of California, San Francisco, analyzed data from 15,000 facilities for The Associated Press, finding that for every two COVID-19 victims in long-term care, there is another who died prematurel­y of other causes. Those “excess deaths” beyond the normal rate of fatalities in nursing homes could total more than 40,000 since March.

The more the virus spread through a home, Kaye found, the greater the level of deaths recorded for other reasons. This suggested care suffered as workers were consumed with attending to COVID-19 patients or were left short-handed as the pandemic infected employees themselves.

“The health care system operates kind of on the edge, just on the margin, so that if there’s a crisis, we can’t cope,” Kaye said. “There are not enough people to look after the nursing home residents.”

Dr. David Gifford, chief medical officer of the American Health Care Associatio­n, which represents nursing homes, disputed that there has been a widespread inability of staff to care for residents and dismissed estimates of tens of thousands of NON-COVID-19 deaths as “speculatio­n.”

“There have been some really sad and disturbing stories that have come out,” Gifford said, “but we’ve not seen that widespread.”

Families around the country, though, say their loved ones didn’t have to die.

In Birmingham, Alabama, Donald Wallace was one of the lucky few to avoid infection as COVID-19 tore through West Hill Health and Rehab.

But the 75-year-old retired truck driver became so malnourish­ed and dehydrated that he dropped to 98 pounds. Septic shock suggested an untreated urinary infection, E. coli in his body from his own feces hinted at poor hygiene, and aspiration pneumonia indicated Wallace, who needed help with meals, probably had choked on his food.

“They stopped taking care of him,” said his son, Kevin Amerson, who provided medical files documentin­g the conditions. “They abandoned him.”

West Hill Health said Wallace was “cared for with the utmost compassion, dedication and respect.”

When the lockdown began at Gurwin Jewish Nursing Home on New York’s Long Island, Dawn Best was confident her 83-year-old mother would continue receiving the care she had grown used to. But as the virus spread, Best sensed the staff couldn’t handle the hand it had been dealt.

Her mother never contracted COVID-19 but died after suffering dehydratio­n, Best said, providing medical documents detailing the diagnosis.

“My mom went from being unbelievab­ly cared for to dead in three weeks,” Best said. “They were in over their head more than anyone could imagine.”

Representa­tives for Gurwin said that they could not comment on Best’s case but that its staff “has been doing heroic work.”

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 ?? Frank Franklin II The Associated Press ?? Dawn Best, with a photo of her mother, Carolyn Best, talks during an interview Thursday in Wantaugh, N.Y., about her mother’s death in a nursing home.
Frank Franklin II The Associated Press Dawn Best, with a photo of her mother, Carolyn Best, talks during an interview Thursday in Wantaugh, N.Y., about her mother’s death in a nursing home.

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