Miami Herald

Long-term care facilities finalize rollout plans for COVID vaccine

- BY BIANCA PADRÓ OCASIO AND SAMANTHA J. GROSS bpadro@miamiheral­d.com sgross@miamiheral­d.com

As 2.9 million doses of the FDA-approved Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine are estimated to arrive in Florida this week, nursing homes and assisted living facilities are finalizing preparatio­ns.

Sunday was the first time that Vivian Royuela, one of the residents at The Palace Suites independen­t living facility in Kendall, was able to meet her 7-month-old granddaugh­ter, who was born in the throes of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

So after months of isolation, it was a no-brainer for Royuela, 66, to sign up to hopefully be one of the first to receive the COVID-19 vaccine, once it arrives to the South Florida facility.

“I don’t know why anybody would not,” said Royuela, who moved to The Palace Suites in the middle of the COVID pandemic. “I would hope that everybody does.”

Her son and daughter-in-law flew in from Virginia to spend 30 minutes with Royuela, as residents were rotated out of the seven white tents set up in the parking lot of the facility for a special holiday visit. It was the first event the facility held since the start of the COVID-19 safety measures began.

As 2.9 million doses of the FDA-approved Pfizer vaccine are estimated to arrive at healthcare facilities and nursing homes this week, Florida’s longterm care facilities and assisted living

communitie­s are finalizing their preparatio­ns to make sure their residents can have seamless access to the shot.

Nursing homes and assisted living facilities have been registerin­g through the federal government for weeks, through partnershi­ps with CVS and Walgreens. On Thursday, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis announced the state health department will send strike teams into long-term care facilities to vaccinate those at greatest risk of contractin­g the disease.

But as an independen­t living facility, The Palace Suites is in the pool of facilities that may not get the highest priority under the state’s plan, as it is still unclear whether independen­t living residents who share a campus with nursing homes or assisted living facilities will also be able to get vaccinated.

Gabriel Garrido, general manager at The Palace Suites, said residents were optimistic about the potential of getting vaccines between late December and early January. The Palace has about 10 different senior residences and shares a campus with one of their nursing homes, which has a vaccine partnershi­p with Walgreens.

“We believe that it will be at the same time like our sister buildings, the nursing home and the assisted living,” Garrido said. “They’ve been in contact with Walgreens to include us.”

There is plenty of enthusiasm among their residents. Out of 140 residents at The Palace Suites, 80 have already signed up to get the vaccine in just a 5-day outreach blitz from the facility’s management, Garrido said. The shot is not mandatory, and residents can opt out.

“Many families are calling: ‘Make sure that my loved one is getting the vaccine,’” Garrido said.

Gail Matillo, the president and CEO of the

Florida Senior Living Associatio­n, said that she has fielded that same question, as some of the longterm care providers she represents share campuses with independen­t living facilities. She has also been asking the state how the providers can vaccinate staff and input data about the vaccinated residents without violating HIPAA, the federal privacy rule meant to protect individual­s’ medical records and other personal health informatio­n.

Matillo said she has relayed many of the questions to the state but that generally, the members are “really excited about this.”

“They just want to get back to some kind of normal life,” she said. “By springtime, we could have some healthy residents again.”

Steve Bahmer, the president and CEO of LeadingAge Florida, was first tapped to serve on a state Department of Health planning subcommitt­ee in October, and was tasked with ensuring Florida’s 4,000 long-term care providers got enrolled in the pharmacy partnershi­p program so they could receive the vaccine when it became available.

The federal government’s partnershi­p pharmacies, CVS and Walgreens, are tasked with making three visits to each facility, keeping records, reporting data to the state and coordinati­ng each facility’s on-site clinic. The pharmacies have the proper refrigerat­ion necessary for the vaccine.

So far, 100% of nursing homes have registered, while around 85% of assisted living facilities have. The Agency for Healthcare Administra­tion issued an emergency rule Dec. 1 to require all facilities sign up. Even though registerin­g is mandatory, any resident has the right to opt out from receiving the vaccine.

So far, there have been a few bumps in the process, Bahmer said, like facilities that had registered not showing up on the state’s list. But much of the logistic issues have been ironed out over the last couple months.

“I think it speaks to how eager our providers are,” he said.

But not all leaders in the long-term care industry feel the same about widespread vaccinatio­n among seniors.

Brian Lee, a former Florida long-term care ombudsman who now leads an organizati­on called Families for Better Care, said while he understand­s the optimism toward a return to normalcy, that optimism should come with a dose of caution.

There is still little data to show how the vaccine works outside a test setting, and he wonders if the elderly and infirmed are the right group to be the so-called “guinea pigs” for the rest of the country. He says frontline workers who are healthier should get the vaccine first, and then one or two months should go by before long-term care residents get it.

“I am concerned nursing home residents will be the control group for the nation. They are not a disposable generation,” Lee said. “Just because they are the oldest and the most informed, doesn’t mean they are expendable.”

Donna Rubin, 65, was visiting her 94-year-old mother Marilyn Lake at The Palace Suites’ holiday event on Sunday. It was one of the only times she’s been able to see her through the health crisis. The only other time she saw her mom in person was when staff noticed her mother was feeling depressed, and allowed her to visit.

“Here, they’ve been very careful and they’ve had very, very few cases,” said Rubin, who is a lab analyst in a South Florida hospital. “I work in a hospital and there was a time when we got 15 to 20 [positive COVID-19 patients] from one facility.”

Rubin added that despite some fears about getting the vaccine, she’s hoping to get the shot once it’s her turn, mostly so she can fly to see her daughters and grandchild­ren who live out of state. And even though she agrees that first responders should get priority, she’s afraid her mother, who lives in independen­t living, won’t be included in the first phase of vaccinatio­ns.

“Honestly, I have a concern that because this is independen­t living they won’t be first,” Rubin said. “We’ve talked about it, she would like to get it, I would like to see her get it because she’s very high risk.”

Vivian Rankin, a 10-year Palace Suites resident and friend of Rubin and Lake, said as conversati­ons about the vaccine become more serious with tim, she has some doubts about getting the vaccine.

“I don’t know if I should bother taking it. Did you know I’m 101 years old?” Rankin said. “I would like somebody else who needs it to take it.”

 ?? POOL Getty Images ?? UPS employees move one of two containers with the first shipments of the FDA-approved Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine at a ramp at UPS Worldport in Louisville, Kentucky, on Sunday. The flight originated in Lansing, Michigan.
POOL Getty Images UPS employees move one of two containers with the first shipments of the FDA-approved Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine at a ramp at UPS Worldport in Louisville, Kentucky, on Sunday. The flight originated in Lansing, Michigan.

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