Seeking to address estimates that more than a third of COVID-19
deaths nationally have occurred in nursing homes and long-term care
facilities–more than 38,000 – the American Medical Directors Association
published recommendations for reducing the spread of the pandemic virus
among residents and staff.
Among the recommendations were the creation of COVID-specific units,
screenings of residents twice daily, discontinuing of drug delivery
modes (e.g. nebulizers) that might spread the virus, and reviews with
patients and families of do-not-intubate and do-not-hospitalize advance
directives.
“The scope and speed of the COVID-19 pandemic brought continual
changes in healthcare protocols as providers learned more about the
disease’s transmission,” said Paula Lester, MD, FACP, CMD, a
geriatrician at NYU Winthrop Hospital and the corresponding author of
the consensus recommendations, which were recently published online in Journal of American Medical Directors Association (JAMDA).
“The time has come to consolidate our learnings as a field in terms
of caring for at-risky elderly and implement uniform, best practices,
especially as we prepare for a potential second wave of infections in
the coming months, as well as for future pandemics,” adds Lester, who
along with her co-authors, serves as a skilled nursing facility (SNF)
certified medical director.
Recommended protocols for facility staff also include COVID testing
on a serial basis–three tests one-week apart–to enable identification of
newly infected staff. Also recommended is to have staff assigned to
specific units to permit easier contact tracing in the event of COVID
cases, and to have staff that are assigned to COVID-19 units not work
elsewhere in the facility.
The report also states that the authors “do not support the mandatory
admission of COVID-19 patients from hospitals to nursing homes as it
may force unprepared facilities to provide care to COVID patients
without the necessary resources or precautions.”
The consensus guidelines in the report – titled “Policy
Recommendations Regarding Skilled Nursing Facility Management of
COVID-19: Lessons From New York State” – are endorsed by the Executive
Board of the New York Medical Directors Association and the Board of the
Metropolitan Area Geriatrics Society. The authors noted, however, that
the suggestions in the report should not take precedence over local
Department of Health or Centers for Disease Control recommendations.
https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2020-06/nlh-csr060520.php
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