Coronavirus Takes A Terrible Toll On Ohio Valley Nursing Homes

The coronavirus is taking a terrible toll on nursing homes in the Ohio Valley. Well over a thousand residents and staff at nursing homes and long-term care facilities in Kentucky, Ohio and West Virginia have tested positive for coronavirus, and dozens have died from COVID-19. 

Residents in these facilities are already more vulnerable, and in many cases, the facilities were running low on protective equipment even before the pandemic hit.

Figures supplied Tuesday by Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear showed 217 residents and 127 staff members had tested positive for coronavirus at 33 facilities around the state; 33 residents and one staff member have died. 

Betsy Johnson is the president of theKentucky Association of Healthcare Facilities, a trade association that represents nursing facilities across the state.  

She said facilities in the region were already running low on personal protective equipment after a significant flu season.

“So we were utilizing our supplies for the flu season and then this hit,” she said. “And of course, the supply chain got broken because a lot of this equipment is made in China and so we were not getting the supplies shipped to the United States.”

Johnson said most of the protective equipment has been given to local hospitals, leaving nursing homes in continued short supply. She said there have been some donations that have helped, but they need additional equipment to keep the region’s most vulnerable population safe from this new virus.

She said facility managers have to be careful where they purchase the protective equipment because they have encountered people who have tried to sell fraudulent equipment.

“But we’ve had several companies come forward and I would hope that they are not committing fraud, but you never know,” she said. “And so you have to be really careful because unfortunately, people take advantage of other people during difficult times.”

Johnson said most of the PPE has been given to local hospitals, leaving nursing homes in continued short supply. 

Kentucky has limited visitation at nursing homes except for family members of residents who are receiving end of life care.

In Ohio, Governor Mike DeWine issued an order Monday requiring long-term care facilities to notify families within 24 hours if someone at the facility has tested positive for COVID-19. 

In West Virginia, several facilities have reported coronavirus cases. Two nursing homes in Wayne and Morgantown have together confirmed more than 90 cases among staff and residents. The association representing nursing homes in the stateissued a plea last week for more protective equipment. “Many facilities have been trying for weeks to find alternative sources, even paying outrageous prices, only to see the orders go unfulfilled or indefinitely delayed,” Marty Wright, CEO of the West Virginia Health Care Association wrote.

Misty Vantrease, a partner withKentucky ElderLaw, a firm that represents seniors and their families, said not being able to see residents in a long-term care facility presents its own challenges. She said she’s been hearing concerns from family members about not being able to see their loved ones and know how well they’re being cared for.

“One of the big ways that when we have a loved one who is in some type of care, that we make sure that they’re being taken care of that all their needs are being met is laying eyes on them,” she said. 

Vantrease said the biggest challenge right now is communication between the facilities and families, which is where attorneys can step in and advocate for those residents. But, she said that’s challenging too because technology can be a difficult barrier and many residents suffer from hearing loss.

 

W.Va.’s Nursing Homes, Long-Term Facilities Running Low On Protective Gear, Group Warns

A trade group that represents West Virginia’s nursing homes and assisted living communities is raising the alarm that the state’s more than 20,000 healthcare workers that work in long-term care facilities may soon run out of personal protective equipment like masks, gloves and gowns. 

In a Friday press release, the West Virginia Health Care Association said there are nearly 12,000 people in long-term care facilities, like nursing homes and assisted living facilities across the Mountain State. As the pandemic continues, essential protective gear is becoming harder to find in West Virginia and nationwide. 

“We’re starting to see a lot of the supply chains dry up where the facilities and health care providers on the front lines are having difficulty getting new personal protective equipment or PPE,” said West Virginia Health Care Association CEO Martin Wright.

In many states, including West Virginia, nursing homes and other long-term care facilities have been ground zero for COVID-19 outbreaks. Morgantown’s Sundale Nursing Home reports 10 staff, three contractors and 23 patients have contracted the virus. Three patients have died. 

Wright praised the response from both citizenswho are donating homemade masks and of the West Virginia National Guard, which is trying to find innovative ways to make and reuse PPE. 

“It’s absolutely helpful, and there’s been a tremendous outpouring from communities that have gone to individual facilities and nursing homes and assisted livings and made homemade masks, and it’s heartwarming to see and it definitely has an impact,” he said. “But the bigger issue is there’s greater needs out there statewide that as this continues to go on, in terms of a crisis, we’re going to have to meet those needs.”

 

Gowns and gloves, for example, are essential equipment in short supply. Wright stressed getting more protective gear is essential to protecting both healthcare workers and residents. 

Last week, the Associated Press reported congressional records from the House Committee on Oversight and Reform showed big gaps in the amount of PPE West Virginia requested and what it obtained from the federal government.

State Begins Background Checks for Long-Term Care Positions

A new state program requires criminal background checks for applicants seeking certain jobs at long-term care facilities.

Health and Human Resources Secretary Karen L. Bowling announced the launch of the West Virginia Clearance for Access: Registry and Employment Screening, or WV CARES, program on Wednesday. The program will be phased in over six months.

Fingerprint-based state and national background checks will be required for people who apply for jobs with access to residents or beneficiaries of long-term care services.

Long-term care facilities include nursing facilities, home health agencies, hospice care providers and adult day care.

Bowling says in a news release that the background checks will reduce the potential for abuse, neglect and exploitation of the elderly and other vulnerable adults.

Exit mobile version