IDVA officials say COVID-19 outbreak slowing at LaSalle Veterans’ Home
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[December 17, 2020]
By SARAH MANSUR
Capitol News Illinois
smansur@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD — Infection control efforts at
the LaSalle Veterans' Home have curbed the spread of the coronavirus
since a deadly outbreak began at the facility last month, according to
officials who testified Wednesday before a House committee investigating
the matter.
That outbreak has caused at least 33 resident deaths, the latest of
which was reported early last week.
The House committee on Wednesday heard testimony from Illinois
Department of Veterans Affairs officials, including Director Linda Chapa
LaVia, Chief of Staff Anthony Kolbeck, Illinois Department of Public
Health medical consultant Dr. Avery Hart, and interim LaSalle
Administrator Anthony Vaughn.
Despite that progress in containing transmission, several lawmakers on
the committee raised concerns to IDVA officials the about the state’s
response from when the initial outbreak was reported on Nov. 1 to the
first on-site visit by an official with the U.S. Department of Veterans
Affairs on Nov. 12.
The in-person subject matter hearing, which lasted about three hours, is
the committee’s first regarding the root cause of the outbreak at
LaSalle. Committee chairwoman Rep. Stephanie Kifowit, D-Oswego, said she
expects the committee will have additional hearings into the matter.
The state Senate Veterans Affairs Committee held its own remote subject
matter hearing on Nov. 24.
Vaughn has been in charge of the home since last week when former
administrator Angela Mehlbrech was fired. Kolbeck said he couldn’t
comment on her firing because it was a personnel matter.
Kifowit said Illinois Department of Public Health officials declined to
attend the hearing – aside from the consultant Hart – citing an ongoing
internal investigation into the LaSalle outbreak.
There are currently 16 residents still positive for the virus out of the
93 total residents remaining at LaSalle, and one positive employee,
according to an IDVA spokesperson.
More than a quarter of the facility’s residents have died since the
first resident tested positive on Nov. 1. By Nov. 7, test results showed
22 residents and seven staff were positive. By Nov. 8, 59 residents and
64 staff tested positive for COVID-19.
Kolbeck said the LaSalle home administrator notified the U.S. Department
of Veterans Affairs of the outbreak on Nov. 2, and the LaSalle County
Health Department notified IDPH “within the reporting system.”
On Nov. 9, Kolbeck said, there was a virtual meeting between IDPH staff
and veterans home administrators “as a general touch-base on the
facilities,” and there was additional correspondence that day between
the LaSalle home administrator and USDVA.
Kolbeck said he also sent an email on Nov. 9 to IDPH, requesting an
on-site visit “to explore potential opportunities for containment and
control not otherwise identified.” On Nov. 11, he said, IDPH had a phone
conversation with the facility administrator and the infection control
nurse.
The facility reported seven resident deaths on Nov. 11.
Rep. David Welter, R-Morris, asked Chapa LaVia whether she spoke to Gov.
JB Pritzker about the deaths reported on Nov. 11 when she and Pritzker
were together in Chicago for a Veterans Day event.
“We discussed it briefly. And, like I've said prior, (Pritzker) has been
kept abreast of everything going on,” she said, adding that Pritzker
called her later on in the week for an update on the situation at
LaSalle.
In response to questions about the immediate response from state and
local agencies to the outbreak, Hart said the LaSalle County Health
Department is the first line of defense.
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Rep. Stephanie Kifowit, D-Oswego, chairs an Illinois
House Veterans' Affairs Committee in Chicago Wednesday in an effort
to investigate a deadly COVID-19 outbreak at the state-run LaSalle
Veterans' Home. (Credit: Blueroomstream.com)
“(Local department of public health officials) are the people who
actually notify IDPH of the outbreak and send updates to IDPH, and I
cannot speak for the local health department. But I am aware that
they provided extensive guidance to the La Salle Veterans’ Home in
the very early days of the outbreak on a number of topics, including
how to manage the cohorting of the residents, how to handle the PPE,
etc. So there was an active intervention by the local health
department in that very early phase,” Hart said.
Hart said an IDPH team visited the home on Dec. 14 to review the
infection control practices put in place since the onsite visits.
During the Nov. 12 visit, a USDVA official noted several
deficiencies at the LaSalle home, including the use of wall mounted
hand sanitizer containers that had a non-alcohol based product. The
facility also used hand sanitizer dispensers containing an
alcohol-based product, which has since replaced the sanitizer in the
non-alcohol based wall mounts.
That site visit report also documented examples of staff failing to
follow proper protocol for personal protective equipment. In one
instance staff were observed eating with masks below their chins in
the kitchen within six feet of one another.
Hart said at the Dec. 14 visit, staff at the LaSalle facility were
found consistently in compliance with Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention guidance regarding appropriate hand hygiene, PPE use
and social distancing.
He said rapid antigen testing being conducted on home employees
prior to every shift and all residents every day “has shown that
transmission within the facility has been controlled.”
“We're not seeing evidence of new transmission within the facility,”
Hart said.
Late last month, the IDVA announced the acting inspector general
from the Illinois Department of Human Services will conduct an
independent investigation into the outbreak. Since then, three
separate legislative committees have begun their own inquiries.
Illinois National Guard members were sent to the LaSalle facility
last week, and National Guard members were also sent to assist with
ongoing COVID-19 outbreaks at veterans homes in Quincy and Manteno
on Monday.
As of Dec. 15, the Quincy Veterans’ Home reported a total of three
resident deaths related to COVID-19 illnesses and total of 70
residents have tested positive for COVID-19 since the beginning of
the pandemic. The facility has reported that 37 residents have
recovered.
Manteno Veterans’ Home has reported 17 total resident deaths related
to COVID-19 since the beginning of the pandemic, as of Dec. 15. The
Manteno home reported 67 total residents have tested positive, and
46 have recovered.
Seven Army National Guard soldiers were sent to LaSalle, while four
Air National Guard Airmen were sent to Quincy and three to Manteno.
The National Guard members are helping staff with COVID-19
administrative tasks, such as processing COVID-19 testing data and
questionnaires for IDVA employees and entering the information into
the medical database within 24 hours, an IDVA spokesperson said.
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