The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Watchdog: Nursing home deaths up 32% in 2020

- By Ricardo AlonsoZald­ivar

WASHINGTON » Deaths among Medicare patients in nursing homes soared by 32% last year, with two devastatin­g spikes eight months apart, a government watchdog reported Tuesday in the most comprehens­ive look yet at the ravages of COVID-19 among its most vulnerable victims.

The report from the inspector general of the Department of Health and Human Services found that about 4 in 10 Medicare recipients in nursing homes had or likely had COVID-19 in 2020, and that deaths overall jumped by 169,291 from the previous year, before the coronaviru­s appeared.

“We knew this was going to be bad, but I don’t think even those of us who work in this area thought it was going to be this bad,” said Harvard health policy professor David Grabowski, nationally recognized expert on long-term care, who reviewed the report for The Associated Press.

“This was not individual­s who were going to die anyway,” Grabowski added. “We are talking about a really big number of excess deaths.”

Investigat­ors used a generally accepted method of estimating “excess” deaths in a group of people after a calamitous event. It did not involve examining individual death certificat­es of Medicare patients, but compared overall deaths among those in nursing homes to levels recorded the previous year.

The technique was used to estimate deaths in Puerto Rico after Hurricane Maria in 2017 and in New York City after the first coronaviru­s surge last spring. It does not attribute a cause of death, but is seen as a barometer of impact.

Death rates were higher in every month last year when compared with 2019. The report documented two spikes with particular implicatio­ns for government policy and for protecting the most vulnerable in future outbreaks of lifethreat­ening illnesses. In April of last year, a total of 81,484 Medicare patients in nursing homes died. Eight months later, after lockdowns and frantic efforts to expand testing, but before vaccines became widely available, nursing-home patients accounted for a staggering 74,299 deaths in December.

Crucial question

“This is happening long after it was clear that nursing homes were particular­ly vulnerable,” said Nancy Harrison, deputy regional inspector general who worked on the report. “We really have to look at that. Why did they remain so vulnerable?”

Federal investigat­ors are still drilling down to try to document the chain of causes and effects.

Responding to the report, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services said that nearly 80% of nursing home residents and more than 55% of staff are now vaccinated, and the agency is working to protect health and safety. CMS sets standards for nursing homes.

Tuesday’s report was the most comprehens­ive yet from the government because it included statistics for the early part of last year, during the initial coronaviru­s surge. Medicare did not require nursing homes to report COVID-19 cases and deaths occurring before May 8, more than four months into the pandemic year.

In another new finding, the report showed that cases and deaths among Asian American patients tracked with the more severe impacts seen among Blacks and Latinos. Asian Medicare enrollees in nursing homes saw the highest increase in death rates, with 27% dying in 2020, compared to 17% the previous year. For whites, the death rate grew to 24% in 2020 from 18% in 2019, a significan­t increase but not as pronounced.

Death rates for Latino and Black patients were 23% last year, up from 15% in 2019.

The inspector general’s office based its analysis on Medicare billing data. It also included patients in Medicare Advantage plans sold by private insurers. Although Medicare does not cover long-term care, the vast majority of nursinghom­e patients are elderly, and Medicare does cover their medical needs. The report included patients who live in nursing homes, as well as those temporaril­y at a facility for rehabilita­tion.

Health economist Tamara Konetzka of the University of Chicago, who also reviewed the report for AP, said building an estimate from individual death certificat­es would have faced another set of challenges. Especially in the first wave of the pandemic, many who died would not necessaril­y have been tested for COVID-19, for example.

“By looking at excess deaths you can get away from some of the measuremen­t issues and say how much worse things were in 2020 than in 2019,” said Konetzka, who has testified before Congress on the impact of COVID-19 in nursing homes.

A riddle

The inspector general’s findings about Asians highlight a riddle for researcher­s, said Konetzka. The reasons for higher cases and deaths among Blacks, Latinos and Asians may not necessaril­y be tied to race and ethnicity. Instead, minority patients may be clustered in homes in communitie­s with more severe outbreaks.

The report also found that low-income nursinghom­e patients covered by Medicare and Medicaid together were much more likely to have gotten COVID-19. The infection rate for that group reached 56%, and 26% died.

Some states suffered worse impacts. By the end of December more than half of the Medicare patients in nursing homes in New Jersey, Connecticu­t, Illinois, and Louisiana had or likely had COVID-19.

Across the U.S., the coronaviru­s found ideal conditions to spread among frail nursing-home patients living in close quarters. Many researcher­s believe it is likely staffers unwittingl­y brought in the virus from surroundin­g communitie­s.

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