U.S. nursing homes plagued by infection control issues pre-COVID-19:
report
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[May 21, 2020]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. nursing
homes have been plagued with infection control deficiencies even before
the coronavirus pandemic turned them into hotspots for COVID-19, the
respiratory disease caused by the virus, a government report said on
Wednesday.
Eighty-two percent of all nursing homes had an infection prevention and
control deficiency cited in one or more years from 2013-2017, according
to the U.S. Government Accountability Office.
Forty-eight percent had such a deficiency cited in multiple years,
according to the report compiled at the request of Democratic Senator
Ron Wyden, based on data from all 50 states and the District of
Columbia.
One of the first coronavirus outbreaks in the United States occurred at
a nursing home in Washington state. Since then, nursing homes across the
nation have reported cases.
More than 30,000 coronavirus deaths are linked to long-term care
facilities, according to the health non-profit Kaiser Family
Foundation's website. That is about one-third of the reported U.S.
deaths related to the virus.
The GAO said deficiencies in nursing homes included inadequate hand
hygiene among staff, or the lack of preventative measures during disease
outbreaks such as isolating sick residents and using personal protective
equipment.
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Medical officials aid a residents from St. Joseph's nursing home to
board a bus, after a number of residents tested positive for
coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Woodbridge, New Jersey, U.S.,
March 25, 2020. REUTERS/Stefan Jeremiah
One New York nursing home, where a respiratory infection sickened 38
residents, did not maintain a complete and accurate list of those
infected, did not isolate residents with symptoms or staff members
helping infected patients, and continued allowing residents to eat
in the common dining room, according to the report.
In another nursing home in California, seven employees had not been
screened for tuberculosis, the report said.
States often determined residents were not harmed by the
deficiencies and typically did not pursue enforcement measures, it
added.
(Reporting by Makini Brice; Editing by Richard Chang)
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