AARP Eye Center
Arizona Nursing Homes are in Crisis; 95.5% Report at Least
One Staff Case Since Beginning of Covid-19
The latest release of AARP’s Nursing Home COVID-19 Dashboard depicts a worsening crisis from coast to coast, including Arizona. In the four-week period ending December 20, 70.5% of nursing homes in Arizona reported residents with confirmed cases of coronavirus, and 95.5% with at least one staff member diagnosed.
The rates of COVID-19 cases and deaths in Arizona’s nursing homes have skyrocketed in the last three months. From September 2020 to December 2020, nursing homes reported that:
· New confirmed cases among residents increased from 1.1 to 14.3 per 100 residents
· New confirmed cases among staff increased from 1.8 to 13.0 per 100 residents
· Deaths among residents increased from 0.21 to 1.84 per 100 residents
Shortages of personal protective equipment (PPE) have declined over the same period, from 25% of nursing homes without a one-week supply in September to 17% in December. Meanwhile, staffing shortages remain a concern, with 25% of facilities reporting a shortage in the most recent dashboard, and little change going back to June 2020.
“Almost a year into the pandemic, nursing home residents and staff remain trapped in a petri dish, nearly defenseless against coronavirus,” said Dana Marie Kennedy, AARP Arizona State Director. “While vaccines will not make nursing home residents safe overnight, this dashboard underscores the urgency of vaccinating residents and staff as quickly as possible. Also, given that most nursing homes reported staff infections and resident cases, it is alarming that so many facilities still do not have adequate PPE.”
Kennedy added, “The continuing coronavirus crisis in nursing homes also spotlights the life-and-death need for fundamental reforms, now. For years, the nursing home industry in Arizona has struggled with poor infection control, understaffing, and quality care issues such as the Hacienda case.” AARP urges elected officials to act immediately, focusing this year on
- Enacting or making permanent the components of AARP’s five-point plan:
- Improving transparency focused on daily, public reporting of cases and deaths in facilities; communication with families about discharges and transfers; and accountability for state and federal funding that goes to facilities.
- Ensuring access to in-person visitation following federal and state guidelines for safety and require continued access to virtual visitation for all residents.
- Ensuring quality care for residents through adequate staffing, oversight, and access to in-person formal advocates, called long-term care Ombudsmen.
- Rejecting immunity for long-term care facilities related to COVID-19.
- Providing supplemental staff wages and benefits
The AARP COVID-19 Nursing Home Dashboard analyzes federally reported data in four-week periods going back to June 1, 2020. Earlier this year, AARP fought for public reporting of nursing home COVID-19 cases and deaths. Using this data, the AARP Public Policy Institute, in collaboration with the Scripps Gerontology Center at Miami University in Ohio, created the dashboard to provide snapshots of the virus’ infiltration into nursing homes and impact on nursing home residents and staff, with the goal of identifying specific areas of concern at the national and state levels in a timely manner.
The full COVID-19 Nursing Home Dashboard is available at www.aarp.org/nursinghomedashboard. For more information on how COVID is impacting nursing homes and AARP’s advocacy on this issue, visit www.aarp.org/nursinghomes.