| Literature DB >> 33256956 |
Christian Bergman1, Nathan M Stall2, Daniel Haimowitz3, Louise Aronson4, Joanne Lynn5, Karl Steinberg6, Michael Wasserman7.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Nursing homes became epicenters of COVID-19 in the spring of 2020. Due to the substantial case fatality rates within congregate settings, federal agencies recommended restrictions to family visits. Six months into the COVID-19 pandemic, these largely remain in place. The objective of this study was to generate consensus guidance statements focusing on essential family caregivers and visitors.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; nursing homes; public policy; visitors
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33256956 PMCID: PMC7539058 DOI: 10.1016/j.jamda.2020.09.036
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Med Dir Assoc ISSN: 1525-8610 Impact factor: 4.669
Fig. 1A flow diagram of the 2-step modified Delphi process. Round 1 started with 78 statements and round 2 started with 41 statements with 77 statements ultimately reaching consensus, defined as >80% of panel members who voted “Agree.”
Persistent Non-Consensus Statements
| Statement | Agree (n, %) | Neutral (n) | Disagree (n) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Definitions | |||
| A nursing home (NH)-onset Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) infection definition does not include an asymptomatic COVID-19 resident who has recovered from the disease but tests positive within 90 days of onset of symptoms. | 13 (68) | 5 | 1 |
| Criteria for Entrance into Phase 3 | |||
| In order for a nursing home to proceed with phased reopening, there should be no new NH-onset cases for 28 days. | 14 (74) | 1 | 4 |
| Testing and Surveillance | |||
| Testing a proportion of randomly selected asymptomatic HCP (staff) who have not previously tested positive should be done for surveillance efforts. The frequency and sample size of staff should be guided by size of the nursing home and level of local community spread. | 15 (79) | 1 | 3 |
| In facilities without any positive COVID-19 cases, test 100% of asymptomatic HCP (staff) who have previously not tested positive weekly for 4 weeks; if no new positives may test 25% of asymptomatic HCP (staff) every 7 days such that 100% of the nursing home staff are tested each month. | 10 (53) | 3 | 6 |
| Testing a proportion of randomly selected asymptomatic residents who have not previously tested positive should not be done for surveillance efforts. Instead, residents who are asymptomatic should only be tested during outbreak investigations of close contacts of a known COVID-19 positive resident or staff member. | 10 (53) | 4 | 5 |
| Residents who are asymptomatic should be allowed to opt out of testing for sole purposes of surveillance. This statement would not be applicable for contact tracing with a known exposure to a COVID-19 resident or staff member. | 13 (68) | 2 | 4 |
| An asymptomatic resident who has previously tested positive for COVID-19 and recovered does not need to be tested again within an 8-week window of prior onset of symptoms. | 14 (74) | 2 | 3 |
| An asymptomatic resident who has previously tested positive for COVID-19 and recovered does not need to be tested again within a 90-day window of prior onset of symptoms. | 11 (58) | 5 | 3 |
| An asymptomatic resident who has previously tested positive for COVID-19 and recovered does not need to be tested again. | 2 (11) | 3 | 11 |
| Outbreak Investigation and Phase Regression | |||
| A new or returning asymptomatic nursing home resident without a prior diagnosis of COVID-19 and who has remained under isolation in a private room for 14 days since admission tests positive during nursing home testing of asymptomatic residents. Not during an outbreak investigation and there has been no exposure to a COVID-19 positive resident or staff. In this situation, re-test the resident only. If subsequently negative and no further suspicion of COVID-19 in the building, this scenario would not warrant nursing home-wide testing or phase regression. | 14 (74) | 1 | 4 |
| Visitor Guidelines | |||
| A negative COVID-19 test is not a requirement prior to visiting a nursing home. | 14 (70) | 1 | 5 |
| Visitors who wish to visit a nursing home resident who is actively symptomatic but for whom COVID-19 testing is pending or unknown should have an informed consent discussion with nursing leadership, demonstrate appropriate donning/doffing of personal protective equipment (PPE) and agree to wear appropriate PPE during the visit. | 8 (47) | 1 | 8 |
| Health Care Personnel | |||
| Allow entry of all essential and nonessential healthcare personnel, contractors, and vendors with appropriate screening, physical distancing, hand hygiene, and face coverings. They would be subject to the same testing and surveillance requirements as the rest of the HCP (staff) cohort. Visitors including non-employed caregivers and surrogate decision makers would be subject to the visitor guidelines. | 14 (74) | 0 | 5 |
| The nursing home should consider a designated care giver (or dedicated support person, surrogate decision-maker) an essential member of the health care team who would not be subject to visitor guidelines if resources (PPE, training, monitoring) are available at the time and the person is directly engaged in compassionate care to alleviate a residents psychosocial stress as a result of isolation. | 15 (79) | 0 | 4 |
| Non–Medically Necessary Trips Outside the Nursing Home | |||
| A resident who engages in a visit with family or friends beyond the nursing home grounds, remains outside, and the visit does not involve close contact with COVID+ individuals or symptomatic individuals would not be subject to isolation upon re-entry to the nursing home. | 3 (17) | 4 | 11 |
| After a resident returns from an outside trip beyond the nursing home grounds and prior to the resident resuming activities within a shared space, the resident should be bathed according to accepted practice with soap and have the clothes they were wearing laundered in a standard fashion. | 9 (47) | 5 | 5 |
| Immunity | |||
| A currently asymptomatic individual who has recovered from COVID-19 and is post 8 weeks from onset of symptoms is not considered infectious and should not be tested. If tested and the test returns positive, as long as the resident remains asymptomatic, it would not be considered a reinfection and the resident is not contagious. | 11 (65) | 2 | 4 |
| A currently asymptomatic individual who has recovered from COVID-19 and is post 90 days from onset of symptoms is not considered infectious and should not be tested. If tested and the test returns positive, as long as the resident remains asymptomatic, it would not be considered a reinfection and the resident is not contagious. | 9 (53) | 1 | 7 |
| A currently asymptomatic individual who has recovered from COVID-19 is not considered infectious and should not be tested. If tested and the test returns positive, as long as the resident remains asymptomatic, it would not be considered a reinfection and the resident is not contagious. | 6 (35) | 4 | 7 |
| Antibody testing can be a surrogate marker of individual immunity but does not currently inform clinical practice; recovery from prior infection does. | 11 (69) | 0 | 5 |
Color scheme represents level of consensus among panel. Yellow represents statements in which 51%–79% of members voted “Agree” and red represents statements in which <50% of members voted “Agree.”
Suggested Visitor Guidance as Developed Through a Delphi Consensus Process
Minimum Criteria to Welcome Visitors All staff, residents, and visitors engage in basic hand hygiene and physical distancing in public, shared spaces. All staff wear a medical-grade mask while in the nursing home. All residents and visitors wear a face covering when in shared, public spaces. If a resident or visitor does not own a face covering, one must be provided by the nursing home. The facility has sufficient disinfecting supplies (hand sanitizers, soap, detergent, etc.) and adequate personal protective equipment (gloves, gowns, masks, face shields/goggles). A written isolation and cohorting plan is in place. A written screening and testing plan with adequate capacity for implementation is in place. A written contact tracing and outbreak investigation plan is in place. |
Screening All persons entering the nursing home (staff, visitors, volunteers, and vendors) undergo the same entrance screening process, including a temperature check and answering an exposure and symptom questionnaire by a trained entrance screener. Visitors that do not comply with the screening procedure are not allowed to enter. |
Visit Logistics Visitors and volunteers can sign up to visit a resident for a defined time period using an electronic process. The nursing home maintains a sign-in log that includes contact information (name, phone number, e-mail address) of visitors and volunteers to help with contact tracing in the event of an exposure. A nursing home may need to limit the number of indoor visitors to no more than 2 visitors at one time to allow physical distancing between visitor groups. Visit frequency and the number of visitors a nursing home is able to accommodate would depend on the physical space, availability to visit outdoors, and personal protective equipment (PPE) availability. |
Infection Prevention Strategies Visitors must be guided to the designated visit area to limit interactions with patient care areas, staff, or other residents. Gloves and a gown with associated hand hygiene are required if visitors wish to engage in limited physical contact with a resident, such as hugging, hand holding,or direct resident care such as assistance with meals. The nursing home must provide gloves and gowns for this purpose. |
Location The nursing home should designate areas for indoor and outdoor visits. Ideally the visits would occur outside, conditions permitting. Indoor areas should be accessible without walking through a resident care area, must be disinfected between scheduled visits, and should be large enough to facilitate physical distancing between visit groups. |
Essential Family Caregiver A nursing home should allow each resident or surrogate decision maker to choose essential family caregivers who, along with the surrogate decision maker, would have priority to frequently visit a resident, for example, to provide complex care, aid in feeding, or redirect and reassure those residents living with dementia who have responsive behaviors. |
Symptomatic Residents Visiting a resident with or without symptoms who has a positive, unknown, or pending COVID-19 test result requires the following steps: The visitor must participate in an informed consent discussion with leadership regarding the risks of potential exposure to COVID-19 and whether they outweigh the benefits of a visit. Additionally, visitors should be counseled to understand the COVID-19 test status and encouraged to wait for a pending test result to return prior to a scheduled visit. The nursing home must provide education and training so that the visitor can demonstrate appropriate donning/doffing of PPE, including a mask, gowns, gloves, and possibly a face shield. The visitor must agree to wear the recommended PPE during the visit and follow all infection prevention and control procedures within the nursing home. |
Compassionate Care, End-of-Life Visits The nursing home should make every attempt possible to work with visitors of residents who are seriously ill, receiving care focused on comfort, and approaching end-of-life. Specifically, facilities may waive the visitor limits, offer extended hours, and offer an in-person room visit to help facilitate the psychosocial well-being of the resident and family members. |