Miami Herald

NURSING HOMES

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152 nursing homes and ALFs that have reported at least one death from COVID-19, four were not listed on the state’s most recent list of positive cases at long-term care facilities. Three deaths were associated with an unknown facility.

One nursing home, the Coquina Center in Ormond Beach, has nine resident deaths listed. The home did not appear on the most recent list, released by the state, of facilities with positive tests. But a prior list of coronaviru­s cases in longterm care facilities said 15 residents had COVID-19, 11 others with positive tests had been transferre­d out, and that nine staffers were infected. Those numbers were supposed to be current as of this past Monday.

Spokespeop­le for DeSantis and his two health agencies — the Department of Health and the Agency for Health Care Administra­tion — declined to discuss discrepanc­ies in the data with the Miami Herald on Friday afternoon. When asked by a reporter to discuss the numbers, a DOH spokesman wrote: “Questions received. We are looking into this.”

This past Tuesday during a meeting with President Donald Trump at the White House, DeSantis brandished a poster board that compared Florida’s coronaviru­s mortality rate in nursing homes and ALFs favorably to the rates in some other states. Since then, deaths of staff and residents have accelerate­d in Florida longterm care facilities, reaching 444.

According to Friday’s release, three nursing homes have suffered the greatest losses: Braden River Rehabilita­tion Center in Bradenton, Suwannee Health and Rehabilita­tion Center in Live Oak and Seminole Pavilion Rehabilita­tion and Nursing Services in Seminole all have reported 13 resident deaths and one death among staff members.

Miami Jewish Health Systems, which operates an enormous elder-care facility with 438 beds at 5200 NE Second Ave., has reported more deaths from COVID-19 than any other facility in South Florida. According to the state, eight residents have died there.

South Florida, which has been the epicenter of COVID-19 infections in the state, accounted for nearly half of all deaths at eldercare facilities. Miami-Dade County, with 95 verified deaths, topped the list, followed by Broward County at 53, and Palm Beach at 52.

The Fountain Manor Health & Rehabilita­tion Center, a 146-bed nursing home in North Miami, reported seven resident deaths. Unity Health and Rehabilita­tion, a 270-bed nursing home in Miami, also reported seven resident deaths.

The data released late Friday — reflecting “the current available informatio­n for nursing homes and assisted living facilities that have had a death that can be linked to the facility” — suggest that some of the elder-care homes with the largest number of COVID-19-related fatalities also have struggled in recent years to satisfy state health regulators.

Unity Health and Braden River both are on the state’s Watch List of nursing homes that failed to meet minimum standards during an inspection. So is Signature Healthcare Center of Waterford, a 214-bed nursing home in Hialeah Gardens with six reported resident deaths — as well as another unspecifie­d “confirmed” death — from the coronaviru­s.

Boulevard Rehabilita­tion of Boynton Beach reported five resident deaths from the coronaviru­s. It had been placed on the state’s Watch List three times in 2018 and 2019. The home has been discipline­d by AHCA 12 times since 2008, including four fines totaling $22,250.

Boulevard was first placed on the Watch List in March of 2018 after a frail 87-yearold resident was sent to the hospital in respirator­y distress and died from what was ruled an accident resulting in five broken ribs, a collapsed right lung, a “bruise along the side of her torso” and pooling of blood in her chest.

It is unclear why the other homes are on the Watch

List, as AHCA appears to have recently scrubbed all Watch List details from its website.

 ??  ?? Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, left, touts the state’s long-term care facilities as a relative coronaviru­s success story during a meeting with President Donald Trump at the White House on Tuesday.
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, left, touts the state’s long-term care facilities as a relative coronaviru­s success story during a meeting with President Donald Trump at the White House on Tuesday.
 ?? MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com, file 2020 ?? More than a month ago, administra­tors at the 180-bed Atria Willow Wood ALF in Fort Lauderdale confirmed that at least six residents had died of COVID-19. But a chart released Friday includes only three resident deaths as confirmed, while three remained ‘under investigat­ion.’
MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com, file 2020 More than a month ago, administra­tors at the 180-bed Atria Willow Wood ALF in Fort Lauderdale confirmed that at least six residents had died of COVID-19. But a chart released Friday includes only three resident deaths as confirmed, while three remained ‘under investigat­ion.’

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