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Monday, April 29, 2024

Trump Admin: ‘Resounding Vindication’ from Independent Report on COVID in Nursing Homes

"I would classify the CMS actions to date as a move in the right direction and better late than never..."

(Headline USA) The Trump administration is claiming “resounding vindication” from an independent commission’s report on the coronavirus crisis in nursing homes, supporting the argument that Democrat governors in several states failed to protect their most vulnerable residents.

People in long-term care facilities represent less than 1% of the U.S. population but more than 40% of the coronavirus deaths, according to the COVID Tracking Project, which has tallied 77,000 deaths among residents and staff.

The recommendations “follow the growing consensus over the past six months about what needs to be done to stem the cases and deaths in nursing homes,” said University of Chicago professor Tamara Konetzka, an expert on long-term care who reviewed the commission’s report.

“I would classify the CMS actions to date as a move in the right direction and better late than never,” she said.

Initially, blue-state governors including New York’s Andrew Cuomo, Michigan’s Gretchen Whitmer, New Jersey’s Phil Murphy and Pennsylvania’s Tom Wolf all supported policies that forced the facilities to comingle healthy residents with infected ones.

The states initially were some of the hardest hit by the pandemic, where the virus was able to incubate and spread despite the draconian lock-downs that many blue states implemented on the general population.

Vice President Mike Pence met with some of the commission members Thursday and called their report “a significant contribution to our ongoing effort to ensure the health and well-being of our seniors in nursing homes and long-term care facilities around the country.”

The commission was set up by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, or CMS.

Agency administrator Seema Verma called its findings “an invaluable action plan for the future and a resounding vindication of our overall approach to date.”

The report included 27 major recommendations in the commission report, signifying the ever-developing understanding of how to combat the virus by focusing on those who are truly at risk.

“There’s an enormous to-do list in front of us,” said Terry Fulmer, a commission member and president of the John A. Hartford Foundation, which works to improve care for older adults.

The administration says it has already acted, or made progress, on most issues flagged.

But the findings’ validation of the Republican president was not well received by all following months in which the Left has sought to bludgeon the president with an election-year campaign that second-guessed his every move.

Harvard professor David Grabowski, another member, complained that “there’s a sense of ‘mission accomplished’ ” coming from the administration and “that’s just not the case.”

“We were charged with providing a road map out of the crisis,” Grabowski said. “We weren’t asked to evaluate the CMS response or provide any kind of valuation as to how they have handled the pandemic.”

Fulmer also recycled some of the months-old attacks on Trump, insinuating that he—and not the state leaders—was caught unprepared for the onslaught.

“We need to get the real data that will tell us where we’re still lacking testing, [protective equipment], and appropriate staffing,” she said.

“We need to really watch the autumn flu season and really keep an close eye on any uptick with the virus—that’s what I’m most worried about,” she continued. “We don’t have a national policy that we are following so we can ensure we have quality across our entire nation, so we are looking for progress there.”

Among the top recommendations in the 186-page report:

  • establish a national testing strategy to replace the state-led nursing home tests. The administration has been shipping fast-test machines to facilities, but there’s concern about ongoing supplies, staff training, and other issues.
  • guarantee supplies of PPE, or personal protective equipment. Earlier this summer, 1 in 5 nursing homes faced PPE shortages. The commission called on the government to take responsibility, guaranteeing a three-month supply of high-quality gear for facilities. The administration says it has provided money for PPE and in August began shipping N95 masks to nursing homes that reported shortages.
  • safely resume family visits. Nursing homes have been in lockdown since mid-March, and that has taken a toll on the well-being of residents. Some facilities have started to allow visits again. The commission recommended a detailed template for how nursing homes can safely resume visitation. The administration says it has already provided guidance.
  • more help with infection control. Moving residents within a facility to separate those infected with COVID-19 is one of the main ways to contain outbreaks. But that can involve added costs and challenges. The commission said clearer government guidance is needed.

The ravages of the coronavirus in nursing homes have surprised and shocked many people.

Grabowski said research indicates that the virus gets into facilities from the surrounding communities, unwittingly carried by staff and visitors who may not yet have symptoms.

The commission concluded that the pandemic has exposed basic flaws in the nation’s oversight of nursing homes, which divides responsibilities among federal, state and local authorities.

That “resulted in a patchwork approach to infection prevention and control that many believe has contributed to our nation’s inability to contain the spread of the virus,” the report said, ignoring the pro-active policies of Democratic governors that promulgated the spread.

Adapted from reporting by the Associated Press

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