By Whitney Bryen
Oklahoma Watch 

Nursing homes hit by latest Covid surge

 

January 28, 2022

Whitney Bryen, Oklahoma Watch

Dayna Jordan performs a nasal swab on an employee outside of Beadles Nursing Home on Dec. 8, 2020. Several of the facility's staff have contracted COVID-19 in recent weeks, but so far, none of the residents have become infected.

At least one long-term care worker and 16 residents are casualties of Oklahoma's largest Covid-19 spike since the pandemic began, Oklahoma Watch found in a review of the state health department's weekly reports.

Like schools and workplaces across the state, facilities that care for Oklahoma's elderly and disabled residents are facing new challenges as they battle the latest wave of Covid-19.

From Jan. 9 through 15, seventeen facilities reported the death of one resident or staff, including the Oklahoma Veterans Center in Claremore which has 54 Covid-19 deaths since March 2020, the highest toll of any facility.

It can take weeks for the deaths of long-term care staff and residents to be reflected in the state's reports because each case is confirmed by health department staff.

That is the largest increase in weekly reported deaths since May and follows seven weeks without any Covid-19 related deaths, reports show.

Infections are up, too, with 393 new cases reported among staff and residents statewide. Of those, 56% are staff.

Since March of 2020, 1,825 residents and 23 workers have died from Covid-19.

As she watches the numbers rise, Veronica Sutton worries about the safety of her father-in-law who lives in a retirement home in Stillwater. Sutton asked that the facility not be named because she feared retaliation from staff or administrators.

There are no new cases reported at the facility in the most recent state report. But Sutton received a letter from the facility this week that at least one staff member has tested positive and has witnessed symptoms among residents and staff during recent visits.

On Wednesday, a worker told Sutton that tests are being conducted on everyone who is reporting symptoms, but Sutton worries that's not enough.

"I can't tell you how many residents I've heard coughing in there lately," Sutton said. "It's a disaster waiting to happen. I just hope they start taking it a bit more seriously now."

Dayna Jordan, nursing director at Beadles Nursing Home in Alva, said memories from the photo library on her phone and from Facebook where she posted daily updates are reminders of the devastation that the virus caused around this time last year.

The number of infections is higher now than it was last year, Jordan said. But the impact is less severe.

As of Thursday afternoon, only staff members are infected, Jordan said. A few residents are being tested daily after being exposed by a visitor or worker, but so far none are positive. All of the facility's residents are vaccinated.

Twelve workers, including five nurses, are out sick. Jordan said most believe they contracted it from their kids, who got it at school. Unlike some districts that have switched temporarily to remote learning, Alva schools remain in-person.

Two unvaccinated staff members are the sickest, Jordan said, including one who has had symptoms for 13 days. Staff who received the booster shot are the least sick reporting only light sniffles and occasional headaches, she said.

And unlike last year when one resident said he would rather take his chances with Covid-19 than to be locked in his room at Christmas, resident routines have been only slightly affected.

"We're still doing visitations and open dining so they can be together. They just have to wear masks," Jordan said. "We didn't want to put them through that again."

Other nursing homes, veteran centers, assisted living centers and homes for people with disabilities are also experiencing mild cases so far, said Steven Buck, president of Care Providers Oklahoma, which represents the for-profit nursing home industry.

But the latest spike isn't without challenges.

The biggest struggle he's hearing from administrators is the speed of exposure with the current surge, which is assumed to be omicron though variants are not always tested.

"During Delta or even the original phases of Covid, if a building had one case then the next day they'd have two. And then four. There was time to quarantine," Buck said. "With omicron facilities are virus free and the next day they have 13 positives."

Federal and state mandates requiring facilities to allow visitation mean, even if an outbreak occurs, residents cannot be shut off from their loved ones outside. They can change visitation standards to help mitigate the spread and limit where visitors are allowed to go inside of the facility, but they can't close their doors completely.

If Oklahoma follows trends in other states, long-term care facilities could see a plateau in cases next month just in time to turn their attention to a presidential vaccine mandate, which was upheld by the Supreme Court last week.

The mandate requires all nursing home employees to be vaccinated. The mandate only applies to facilities that receive Medicare and Medicaid funding, which means some long-term care workers, like those at assisted living facilities, are exempt.

Vaccination rates continue to go up. According to a Jan. 2 report from the Centers for Disease Control, 68% of Oklahoma's long-term care workers are fully vaccinated. That's up from 49% in August.

Nationally, 80% of staff are vaccinated, according to the report.

The state's weekly report includes cumulative counts of Covid-19 cases and deaths at Oklahoma's long-term care facilities beginning on pg. 24.

Oklahoma Watch is a nonprofit organization that produces in-depth and investigative journalism on important public-policy issues facing the state. The organization's website is at http://www.oklahomawatch.org.

 

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