U.S. to require nursing home employees to get COVID-19 shots
Send a link to a friend
[August 19, 2021]
By Eric Beech and Nancy Lapid
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -President Joe Biden
said on Wednesday his administration will require employees at nursing
homes to be vaccinated against COVID-19 as a condition of the facilities
participating in the Medicare and Medicaid government healthcare
programs.
Biden made the announcement hours after the release of a study https://bit.ly/3mebUYT
showing that the effectiveness of COVID-19 vaccines for residents of
nursing homes and long-term care facilities, where residents are often
elderly and frail, has dropped since the Delta variant became dominant
in the United States.
Residents of nursing homes have been hard hit during the pandemic, with
many facilities experiencing high death tolls - particularly early in
the public health crisis. People living in nursing homes were among the
first to be given shots after COVID-19 vaccines won U.S. government
authorization last year.
But some nursing homes have not required staff members to be vaccinated
against COVID-19 - and some employees have opted not to get the shots
amid vaccine skepticism among some Americans.

"I'm using the power of the federal government as a payer of healthcare
costs to insure we reduce those risks to our most vulnerable seniors.
These steps are all about keeping people safe and out of harm's way,"
Biden said at the White House.
"If you visit, live or work in a nursing home, you should not be at a
higher risk for contracting COVID from unvaccinated employees," Biden
added.
Medicare is the federal health insurance program for people 65 and
older. Medicaid is a state-federal health insurance program for the
poor. Many nursing homes are reliant on payments from these programs.
Biden said that more than 130,000 residents in U.S. nursing homes have
died from COVID-19 and that vaccination rates among nursing home
employees trail the rest of the country. Biden said studies show that
having a highly vaccinated nursing home staff is associated with at
least 30 percent fewer COVID-19 cases among residents.
The spread of the highly infectious Delta variant, which according to
CDC data accounted last month for more than 80% of new U.S. infections,
has complicated efforts to combat the pandemic in the United States and
globally.
In the new study, researchers from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention compared weekly data from 3,862 nursing homes and
long-term care facilities spanning March 1 to May 9, before Delta became
widespread, to data from 14,917 such facilities covering June 21 to Aug.
9, when the variant was responsible for the majority of new infections.
[to top of second column]
|

A syringe is filled with a dose of Pfizer's COVID-19 vaccine at a
pop-up community vaccination center at the Gateway World Christian
Center in Valley Stream, New York, U.S., February 23, 2021.
REUTERS/Brendan McDermid

They found that efficacy of the two-dose vaccines
from Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna for preventing any coronavirus
infection - mild or severe - dropped from 74.7% to 53.1%.
Effectiveness estimates were similar for the Pfizer-BioNTech and
Moderna vaccines, they said.
The study was published in the CDC's Morbidity and Mortality Weekly
Report (MMWR).
The findings were cited by federal health officials on Wednesday in
their announcement that COVID-19 booster shots would be made widely
available to Americans beginning on Sept. 20, with protection
from initial vaccination waning over time.
The first groups to receive those boosters will include nursing home
residents and other elderly Americans, as well as people with weak
immune systems, officials said.
In a second study published in MMWR, New York State Department
of Health officials found that by late July, 65% of New York adults
had been fully vaccinated with two doses of the Pfizer/BioNTech or
Moderna shots or one dose of the Johnson & Johnson shot.
Between early May and late July, the vaccines' effectiveness for
preventing new infections dropped from 91.7% to 79.8%, the study
found. Vaccine efficacy at preventing hospitalization held steady,
ranging from 91.9% to 95.3%, it found.

The effectiveness of the two-dose vaccines against hospitalization
lasts at least six months, according to a separate study by
researchers in 18 U.S. states who reviewed data from 3,089
hospitalized patients, including 1,194 with COVID-19.
(Reporting by Eric Beech and Nancy Lapid; Editing by Michele
Gershberg and Will Dunham)
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |