How coronavirus ravaged a nursing home industry that was already 'in crisis'

The coronavirus pandemic has affected people of all races and ages and has particularly ravaged the nursing homes and assisted living communities across the U.S.

Nearly 43% of the more than 125,000 U.S. coronavirus deaths have been linked to nursing homes, according to a recent New York Times analysis.

Experts are attributing much of it to the lack of resources that nursing homes across the country are facing, along with their particularly vulnerable population.

Blond female healthcare worker wearing scrubs, gloves and a red fabric face mask sits across from a patient on oxygen sitting in a wheelchair during a speech therapy session amid the corona virus COVID-19 pandemic.
There are roughly 15,600 nursing homes in the U.S. with over 1.3 million residents and over 1.6 million staff members. (Photo: Getty Images)

“Prior to COVID, the industry was definitely in crisis,” David Grabowski, a professor of health care policy at Harvard Medical School, told Yahoo Finance. “We’ve seen understaffing in a lot of buildings, quality of care problems, a number of closures in terms of nursing homes around the country. And I would attribute a lot of that to the economic model that the nursing homes operate under.”

According to the Times analysis, “the virus has infected more than 282,000 people at some 12,000 facilities” as of June 26 and killed more than 54,000. There are roughly 15,600 nursing homes in the U.S. with over 1.3 million residents and over 1.6 million staff members.

“We’ve seen just incredible shortfalls,” Grabowski said. “One nurse aide trying to care for 25 or 30 residents on her shift, and just really dire situations in different nursing homes around the country due to COVID.”

There is no federal standard nurse-to-resident ratio at nursing homes, according to Fierce Healthcare, and no current national data on staffing due to the pandemic.

“It’s the industry right now that needs support,” Grabowski said. “We need more personal protective equipment, more testing, and more support for these direct caregivers. They need hazard pay and benefits, and we need to recruit additional individuals into this workforce. Because otherwise, it just can’t continue down the path that we’re on right now.”

Cases are surging in the southern part of the U.S. (Graphic: David Foster/Yahoo Finance)
Cases are surging in the southern part of the U.S. (Graphic: David Foster/Yahoo Finance)

How it all began

It all began at the end of February when both residents and staff at a nursing facility in Kirkland, Washington began displaying symptoms of coronavirus.

By April, two-thirds of the residents, along with dozens of staff members, tested positive and 37 people linked to the nursing home died. Now, the facility is facing a $600,000 fine after state inspectors found it “did not have an adequate infection control system in place and failed to provide quality care, among other findings,” according to the New York Times.

A recent NCAL survey found that many assisted living communities are running low on PPE such as N95 masks, surgical face masks, face shields, gowns, and gloves. And, more than half of nursing homes and assisted living communities have reported issues with lab processing times for coronavirus tests — 87% have said it’s taken two days or longer.