The Mercury News

White House recommends tests for all nursing home residents

- By Kevin Freking and Bernard Condon

WASHINGTON >> With deaths mounting at the nation’s nursing homes, the White House strongly recommende­d to governors Monday that all residents and staff at such facilities be tested for the coronaviru­s in the next two weeks.

Why the government is not ordering testing at the the nation’s more than 15,000 nursing homes was unclear. Nor was it clear why it is being recommende­d now, more than two months after the nation’s first major outbreak at a nursing home outside of Seattle that eventually killed 45 people.

Vice President Mike Pence, who leads the White House coronaviru­s task force, told governors on a videoconfe­rence call that it’s the federal government’s strong recommenda­tion that such testing be done.

“We really believe that all 1 million nursing home residents need to be tested within next two weeks as well as the staff,” added Dr. Deborah Birx, the task force coordinato­r, according to a recording of the call obtained by The Associated Press.

President Donald Trump has repeatedly said there have been plenty of testing kits and has shifted blame to governors for reacting too slowly on testing, a charge he repeated in a news conference later Monday.

“Frankly, some of the governors were very lax with respect to nursing homes. It was obvious right from the beginning,” Trump said, referring to the Washington state outbreak.

Asked why testing was recommende­d, not ordered, Trump said: “I would certainly consider that. I will mandate it if you’d like.”

More than 27,000 residents and staff have died from outbreaks of the virus at the nation’s nursing homes and long-term care facilities, according to an AP tally based on state health department­s and media reports. That is about a third of all 80,000 deaths in the U.S. that have been attributed to the virus.

Nursing home operators have said the lack of testing kits has left them nearly powerless to stop the virus from entering their facilities because they haven’t been able to identity silent spreaders not showing symptoms.

The American Health Care Associatio­n, the main nursing home trade group, welcomed the new testing recommenda­tion but said the federal government needed to do more to make that possible, including allocating billions of additional dollars to the effort.

Charlene Harrington, a professor emeritus of nursing at UC San Francisco, said nursing homes should have been prioritize­d from the start given their vulnerable population­s and questioned why the testing recommenda­tion is only happening now.

“We’re two months into it,” she said. “If they had done that to begin with, we would’ve picked up cases early and we wouldn’t have so many deaths.”

Representa­tives for the federal Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services did not immediatel­y respond when asked why the agency wasn’t making testing a requiremen­t. In midMarch, it asked homes to cease group gatherings and visitation­s, and to screen staff with such measures as temperatur­e checks.

A senior administra­tion official said taking a tougher stand is still an option.

“If the states aren’t able to come back with plans quickly to do it, then there’s a good chance we will order them to do that, but we believe that right now there are plenty of tests out there,” the official said on condition of anonymity because he lacked authorizat­ion to speak to the media.

West Virginia mandated testing for all residents and staff several weeks ago. And just Sunday, New York, the nation’s leader in nursing home deaths, began requiring all staff to be tested twice a week.

 ?? CHRIS CARLSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? For nearly two months, many nursing homes nationwide have been on virtual lockdown. The outbreaks continue, however, possibly spread by the same nursing home workers who are risking their lives to tend to some of society’s most vulnerable.
CHRIS CARLSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE For nearly two months, many nursing homes nationwide have been on virtual lockdown. The outbreaks continue, however, possibly spread by the same nursing home workers who are risking their lives to tend to some of society’s most vulnerable.

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