| Literature DB >> 33211679 |
Sarah H Yi1, Isaac See1, Alyssa G Kent1, Nicholas Vlachos1, J Carrie Whitworth1, Kerui Xu1, Katryna A Gouin1, Shirley Zhang1, Kara Jacobs Slifka1, Ann Goding Sauer1, Preeta K Kutty1, Joseph F Perz1, Nimalie D Stone1, Matthew J Stuckey1.
Abstract
The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has highlighted the vulnerability of residents and staff members in long-term care facilities (LTCFs) (1). Although skilled nursing facilities (SNFs) certified by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) have federal COVID-19 reporting requirements, national surveillance data are less readily available for other types of LTCFs, such as assisted living facilities (ALFs) and those providing similar residential care. However, many state and territorial health departments publicly report COVID-19 surveillance data across various types of LTCFs. These data were systematically retrieved from health department websites to characterize COVID-19 cases and deaths in ALF residents and staff members. Limited ALF COVID-19 data were available for 39 states, although reporting varied. By October 15, 2020, among 28,623 ALFs, 6,440 (22%) had at least one COVID-19 case among residents or staff members. Among the states with available data, the proportion of COVID-19 cases that were fatal was 21.2% for ALF residents, 0.3% for ALF staff members, and 2.5% overall for the general population of these states. To prevent the introduction and spread of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, in their facilities, ALFs should 1) identify a point of contact at the local health department; 2) educate residents, families, and staff members about COVID-19; 3) have a plan for visitor and staff member restrictions; 4) encourage social (physical) distancing and the use of masks, as appropriate; 5) implement recommended infection prevention and control practices and provide access to supplies; 6) rapidly identify and properly respond to suspected or confirmed COVID-19 cases in residents and staff members; and 7) conduct surveillance of COVID-19 cases and deaths, facility staffing, and supply information (2).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33211679 PMCID: PMC7676639 DOI: 10.15585/mmwr.mm6946a3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep ISSN: 0149-2195 Impact factor: 17.586
COVID-19 cases among residents and staff members in assisted living facilities (ALFs) and the general population — 39 states, October 15, 2020*
| Location | ALFs†,§,¶ | COVID-19 cases** | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total ALFs (38 states) | ALFs with ≥1 case (39 states) | General population (33 states) | ALF residents (23 states) | ALF staff members (22 states) | ALF residents and staff members (33 states) | |
| No. | No. (%) | No. | No. (%) | No. (%) | No. (%) | |
| National†† | ||||||
| Total | 28,623§§ | 6,440(22.5) | 6,033,180 | 27,965 (0.6) | 17,799 (0.4) | 60,751 (1.0) |
| Median (IQR) | 275 (211–640) | 115 (65–216) | 108,139 (70,520–175,922) | 891 (324–1,939) | 521 (227–1,106) | 1,234 (526–2,774) |
| State | ||||||
| Arizona | 2,122 | 376 (17.7) | —§§ | —§§ | —§§ | —§§ |
| Arkansas | 172 | 51 (29.7) | 96,523 | 112 (0.1) | 111 (0.1) | 223 (0.2) |
| California¶¶ | 7,364 | 388 (5.3) | 861,887 | 3,600 (0.4) | 2,295 (0.3) | 5,895 (0.7) |
| Colorado | 656 | 80 (12.2) | 80,776 | 891 (1.1) | 615 (0.8) | 1,506 (1.9) |
| Connecticut | 111 | 103 (92.8) | 59,748 | 1,100 (1.8) | 134 (0.2) | 1,234 (2.1) |
| Delaware | 33 | 8 (24.2) | —§§ | —§§ | —§§ | —§§ |
| Florida | 3,113 | 450 (14.5) | 741,631 | 1,502 (0.2) | 754 (0.1) | 2,256 (0.3) |
| Georgia | 252 | 213 (84.5) | 336,227 | 1,098 (0.3) | 958 (0.3) | 2,056 (0.6) |
| Hawaii | 18 | 6 (33) | 5,349 | 1 (—) | 1 (—) | 2 (—) |
| Idaho | 280 | 115 (41.1) | 50,610 | —§§ | —§§ | 1,347 (2.7) |
| Illinois | 663 | 254 (38.3) | 331,613 | —§§ | —§§ | 3,977 (1.2) |
| Indiana | 211 | 134 (63.5) | 143,911 | 626 (0.4) | 302 (0.2) | 928 (0.6) |
| Iowa | 455 | 6 (1.3) | 103,222 | —§§ | —§§ | 106 (0.1) |
| Kansas | 220 | 12 (5.5) | 70,520 | —§§ | —§§ | 163 (0.2) |
| Kentucky | 131 | 67 (51.1) | 84,195 | 107 (0.1) | 151 (0.2) | 258 (0.3) |
| Louisiana | —*** | 185 (—***) | 173,088 | —§§ | —§§ | 1,245 (0.7) |
| Maryland | 1,626 | 201 (12.4) | 133,547 | 2,253 (1.7) | 1,952 (1.5) | 4,205 (3.1) |
| Massachusetts | 269 | 215 (79.9) | 148,756 | —§§ | —§§ | 1,855 (1.2) |
| Minnesota | 1,744 | 303 (17.4) | —§§ | —§§ | —§§ | —§§ |
| Mississippi | 113 | 58 (51.3) | 108,139 | 362 (0.3) | 289 (0.3) | 651 (0.6) |
| Montana | 211 | 71 (33.6) | 20,210 | —§§ | —§§ | 526 (2.6) |
| Nevada | 381 | 94 (24.7) | 87,968 | 481 (0.5) | 274 (0.3) | 755 (0.9) |
| New Hampshire | 139 | 12 (8.6) | 8,878 | 285 (3.2) | 211 (2.4) | 496 (5.6) |
| New Jersey | 263 | 216 (82.1) | 216,994 | 4,367 (2.0) | 2,783 (1.3) | 7,150 (3.3) |
| New Mexico | 267 | 70 (26.2) | —§§ | —§§ | —§§ | —§§ |
| New York | 337 | 65 (19.3) | —§§ | —§§ | —§§ | —§§ |
| North Carolina | 591 | 174 (29.4) | 240,105 | 2,274 (0.9) | 976 (0.4) | 3,250 (1.4) |
| North Dakota | 139 | 70 (50.4) | 28,947 | 117 (0.4) | 90 (0.3) | 207 (0.7) |
| Ohio | 787 | 329 (41.8) | 173,665 | 1,625 (0.9) | 1,149 (0.7) | 2,774(1.6) |
| Oklahoma | 211 | 99 (46.9) | 103,836 | —§§ | —§§ | 713 (0.7) |
| Oregon | 241 | 65 (27.0) | 38,522 | —§§ | —§§ | 1,003 (2.6) |
| Pennsylvania | 1,203 | 448 (37.2) | 175,922 | 2,456 (1.4) | 1,264 (0.7) | 3,720 (2.1) |
| Rhode Island | 65 | 15 (23.1) | 25,698 | 266 (1.0) | —§§ | 266 (1.0) |
| South Carolina | 501 | 190 (37.9) | 158,883 | 1,152 (0.7) | 620 (0.4) | 1,772 (1.1) |
| Tennessee | 378 | 47 (12.4) | 211,001 | 138 (0.1) | 127 (0.1) | 265 (0.1) |
| Texas | 2,016 | 629 (31.2) | 759,395 | 2,739 (0.4) | 2,317 (0.3) | 5,056 (0.7) |
| Utah | 236 | 156 (66.1) | 90,491 | 413 (0.5) | 426(0.5) | 839 (0.9) |
| Virginia | 565 | 191 (33.8) | 162,923 | —§§ | —§§ | 4,052 (2.5) |
| Washington | 539 | 274 (50.8) | —§§ | —§§ | —§§ | —§§ |
Abbreviations: COVID-19 = coronavirus disease 2019; IQR = interquartile range.
* Data were accessed on October 15, 2020. The most recent data available varied across states from September 24, to October 15, 2020.
† The following states reported COVID-19 in individual long-term care facilities, but did not specify facility type: Arkansas, Delaware, Georgia, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Maryland, Minnesota, Mississippi, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Oklahoma, and Oregon. For these states, facilities were linked with state regulatory listings to identify assisted living and similar residential care facilities.
§ “Assisted living facility” also refers to long-term care facilities defined as adult care facility (ACF), adult care home (ACH), adult home (AH), adult residential facility (ARF), assisted care living facility (ACLF), assisted care living home (ACLH), assisted living community (ALC), assisted living facility special care (ALF SC), assisted living program (ALP), assisted living residence (ALR), basic care facility (BCF), community residential care facility (CRCF), enriched housing program (EHP), home for the aged (HFTA), personal care home (PCH), residential care facility (RCF), residential care facility for the elderly (RCFE), supportive living program (SLP), and supported residential care facility (sRCF). The following states report COVID-19 in assisted living facilities using one or more of those terms: California (ARF, RCFE), Illinois (ALF, SLP), Indiana (RCF), Iowa (ALF, RCF), Louisiana (ARF), Maryland, (ALP), Massachusetts (ALR), New Hampshire (sRCF, ALF, RCF), New Jersey (ALR, ALP, PCH), New York (AH, ALP, EHP), North Carolina (ACH), North Dakota (ALF, BCF), Oklahoma (ALC, RCF), Pennsylvania (ALF, ALF-SC, PCH), South Carolina (CRCF), and Tennessee (ACLF, HFTA).
¶ Numbers reflect cumulative counts where available. The following states report cases associated with active COVID-19 outbreaks, which represent those occurring in a recent timeframe, as defined by the state: Delaware, Florida, Mississippi, New Jersey, North Carolina, North Dakota, Tennessee, and Utah. When possible, cumulative counts were approximated by using maximum active numbers from outbreaks among available reports retrieved over time (Delaware, Mississippi, New Jersey, North Carolina, and North Dakota) or by combining numbers from active and inactive outbreaks (Colorado).
** ALF COVID-19 case data come from state health department websites; general population COVID-19 case data come from https://usafacts.org/visualizations/coronavirus-covid-19-spread-map/.
†† Each state-level measure was summed to the national level and summarized across reporting states using median and IQR.
§§ No data presented.
¶¶ When ranges were used instead of actual numbers, the minimum non-zero number within the range was used (e.g., a value of “<5” was treated as a count of 1); applicable states included: California and Massachusetts.
*** A reliable estimate was not ascertainable for the total number of facilities corresponding to those reported on by the state health department for Louisiana and therefore does not contribute to the total number of ALFs.
COVID-19-associated deaths*, among residents and staff members in assisted living facilities (ALFs) and the general population — 28 states, October 15, 2020§,¶
| Location | General population (28 states) | ALF residents (20 states) | ALF staff members (9 states) | ALF residents and staff members (28 states) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nationwide** | ||||
| Total | 153,348 | 5,469 (4.1) | 46 (0.1) | 7,433 (4.8) |
| Median (IQR) | 3,269 (1,136–5,993) | 215 (61–397) | 1 (0–5) | 156 (67–403) |
| State | ||||
| Arkansas | 1,636 | 15 (0.9) | 0 (—) | 15 (0.9) |
| California | 16,677 | 444 (2.7) | 24 (0.1) | 468 (2.8) |
| Colorado | 2,159 | 229 (10.6) | 0 (—) | 229 (10.6) |
| Connecticut | 4,527 | 381 (8.4) | 0 (—) | 381 (8.4) |
| Delaware | 651 | 37 (5.7) | —†† | 37 (5.7) |
| Georgia | 7,486 | 230 (3.1) | —†† | 230 (3.1) |
| Idaho | 517 | —†† | —†† | 151 (29.2) |
| Illinois | 9,127 | —†† | —†† | 692 (7.6) |
| Indiana | 3,862 | 160 (4.1) | —†† | 160 (4.1) |
| Kentucky | 1,296 | 18 (1.4) | 0 (—) | 18 (1.4) |
| Louisiana | 5,495 | —†† | —†† | 146 (2.7) |
| Maryland | 4,086 | 587 (14.4) | 12 (0.3) | 599 (14.7) |
| Mississippi | 3,152 | 72 (2.3) | —†† | 72 (2.3) |
| Montana | 227 | —†† | —†† | 38 (16.7) |
| Nevada | 1,691 | 98 (5.8) | 1 (0.1) | 99 (5.9) |
| New Hampshire | 448 | —†† | —†† | 82 (18.3) |
| New Jersey | 16,197 | 1,326 (8.2) | —†† | 1,354 (8.4) |
| New York | 33,041 | 200 (0.6) | —†† | 200 (0.6) |
| North Carolina | 3,874 | 303 (7.8) | 5 (0.1) | 308 (8.0) |
| Oklahoma | 1,143 | —†† | —†† | 65 (5.7) |
| Oregon | 610 | —†† | —†† | 121 (19.8) |
| Pennsylvania | 8,410 | 483 (5.7) | —†† | 483 (5.7) |
| Rhode Island | 1,116 | 42 (3.8) | —†† | 42 (3.8) |
| South Carolina | 3,575 | 253 (7.1) | 4 (0.1) | 257 (7.2) |
| Tennessee | 2,726 | 20 (0.7) | —†† | 20 (0.7) |
| Texas | 15,702 | 504 (3.2) | —†† | 504 (3.2) |
| Utah | 531 | 67 (12.6) | —†† | 67 (12.6) |
| Virginia | 3,386 | —†† | —†† | 595 (17.6) |
Abbreviations: COVID-19 = coronavirus disease 2019; IQR = interquartile range.
* The following states reported COVID-19 deaths in individual long-term care facilities, but did not specify facility type: Arkansas, Delaware, Georgia, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Maryland, Minnesota, Mississippi, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Oklahoma, and Oregon. For these states, facilities were linked with state regulatory listings to identify assisted living and similar residential care facilities.
† Numbers reflect cumulative counts where available. The following states only report COVID-19–related deaths in active outbreaks, which represent those occurring in a recent timeframe, as defined by the state: Delaware, Mississippi, New Jersey, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Utah. When possible, cumulative counts were approximated by using maximum active numbers from outbreaks among available reports retrieved over time (Delaware, Mississippi, New Jersey, North Carolina, and North Dakota).
§ Data were accessed on October 15, 2020. The most recent data available varied across states from September 24, to October 15, 2020.
¶ ALF COVID-19-associated death data come from state health department websites; general population COVID-19-associated death data come from https://usafacts.org/visualizations/coronavirus-covid-19-spread-map/.
** Each state-level measure was summed to the national level and summarized across reporting states using median and IQR.
†† No data presented.
Proportion of deaths among COVID-19 cases*, among residents and staff members in assisted living facilities (ALFs) and general population — 26 states, October 15, 2020
| Location | General population (25 states) | ALF residents (17 states) | ALF staff members (9 states) | ALF residents and staff members (25 states) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| % (No. deaths/cases) | % (No. deaths/cases) | % (No. deaths/cases) | % (No. deaths/cases) | |
| Nationwide¶ | ||||
| Total | 2.5 (119,656/4,761,090) | 21.4 (5,232/24,435) | 0.6 (46/7,128) | 13.5 (7,196/53,388) |
| Median (IQR) | 2.2 (1.6–3.0) | 19.8 (15.9–24.7) | 0.4 (0–0.6) | 11.9 (9.2–15.1) |
| State | ||||
| Arkansas | 1.7 (1,636/96,523) | 13.4 (15/112) | 0.0 (0/111) | 6.7 (15/223) |
| California | 1.9 (16,677/861,887) | 12.3 (444/3,600) | 1.0 (24/2,295) | 7.9 (468/5,895) |
| Colorado | 2.7 (2,159/80,776) | 25.7 (229/891) | 0.0 (0/615) | 15.2 (229/1,506) |
| Connecticut | 7.6 (4,527/59,748) | 34.6 (381/1,100) | 0.0 (0/134) | 30.9 (381/1,234) |
| Georgia | 2.2 (7,486/336,227) | 20.9(230/1,098) | —** | 11.2 (230/2,056) |
| Idaho | 1.0 (517/50,610) | —** | —** | 11.2 (151/1,347) |
| Illinois | 2.8 (9,127/331,613) | —** | —** | 17.4 (692/3,977) |
| Indiana | 2.7 (3,862/143,911) | 25.6 (160/626) | —** | 17.2 (160/928) |
| Kentucky | 1.5 (1,296/84,195) | 16.8 (18/107) | 0.0 (0/151) | 7.0 (18/258) |
| Louisiana | 3.2 (5,495/173,088) | —** | —** | 11.7 (146/1,245) |
| Maryland | 3.1 (4,086/133,547) | 26.1 (587/2,253) | 0.6 (12/1,952) | 14.2 (599/4,205) |
| Mississippi | 2.9 (3,152/108,139) | 19.9 (72/362) | —** | 11.1 (72/651) |
| Montana | 1.1 (227/20,210) | —** | —** | 7.2 (38/526) |
| Nevada | 1.9 (1,691/87,968) | 20.4 (98/481) | 0.4 (1/274) | 13.1 (99/755) |
| New Hampshire | 5.0 (448/8,878) | —** | —** | 16.5 (82/496) |
| New Jersey | 7.5 (16,197/216,994) | 30.4 (1,326/4,367) | 18.9 (1,354/7,150) | |
| North Carolina | 1.6 (3,874/240,105) | 13.3 (303/2,274) | 0.5(5/976) | 9.5 (308/3,250) |
| Oklahoma | 1.1 (1,143/103,836) | —** | —** | 9.1 (65/713) |
| Oregon | 1.6 (610/38,522) | —** | —** | 12.1 (121/1,003) |
| Pennsylvania | 4.8 (8,410/175,922) | 19.7 (483/2,456) | —** | 13.0 (483/3,720) |
| Rhode Island | 4.3 (1,116/25,698) | 15.8 (42/266) | —** | 15.8 (42/266) |
| South Carolina | 2.3 (3,575/158,883) | 22.0 (253/1,152) | 0.6 (4/620) | 14.5 (257/1,772) |
| Tennessee | 1.3 (2,726/211,001) | 14.5 (20/138) | —** | 7.5 (20/265) |
| Texas | 2.1 (15,702/759,395) | 18.4 (504/2,739) | —** | 10.0 (504/5,056) |
| Utah | 0.6 (531/90,491) | 16.1 (67/413) | —** | 8.0 (67/839) |
| Virginia | 2.1 (3,386/162,923) | —** | —** | 14.7(595/4,052) |
Abbreviations: COVID-19 = coronavirus disease 2019; IQR = interquartile range.
* ALF COVID-19–associated case and death data come from state health department websites; general population COVID-19–associated case and death data come from https://usafacts.org/visualizations/coronavirus-covid-19-spread-map/.
† Proportion of deaths among COVID-19 cases was calculated by dividing deaths by cases.
§ Data were accessed on October 15, 2020. The most recent data available varied across states from September 24, to October 15, 2020.
¶ Each state-level measure was summed to the national level and summarized across reporting states using median and IQR.
** No data presented.