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Unvaccinated nursing home staff are being linked to COVID-19 outbreaks at facilities across the country with only 57% of workers fully vaccinated compared to 80% of residents

  Lagging vaccination rates among nursing home staff are being linked to COVID-19 outbreaks and deaths at senior facilities across the count...

 Lagging vaccination rates among nursing home staff are being linked to COVID-19 outbreaks and deaths at senior facilities across the country.

According to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), only 57.3 percent of nursing home workers are fully vaccinated.

This is about the same as the overall percentage of fully vaccinated adults in the U.S. but significantly lower than the 80.2 percent of residents who are vaccinated.

In 10 states - Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Oklahoma, Tennessee and Wyoming - 50 percent or fewer of staff are vaccinated, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) data reveal.  

Facilities in Colorado and Indiana are reporting COVID-19 deaths among fully vaccinated residents, at facilities where a large percentage staff had not received shots.

Some policy experts are urging the government to close the gap by requiring nursing home staffers get shots, a mandate the Biden administration has been reluctant to issue.

Nursing home operators fear such a move could backfire, prompting many staffers with vaccine qualms to simply quit their jobs.

Lagging vaccination rates among nursing home staff are being linked to breakthrough COVID-19 infections and deaths among seniors. Pictured: A nursing home resident receives a shot of the COVID-19 vaccine at King David Center for Nursing and Rehabilitation in New York City, January 2021

Lagging vaccination rates among nursing home staff are being linked to breakthrough COVID-19 infections and deaths among seniors. Pictured: A nursing home resident receives a shot of the COVID-19 vaccine at King David Center for Nursing and Rehabilitation in New York City, January 2021

Across the U.S., 57.3% of nursing home workers are fully vaccinated against COVID-19 (above) compared to 80.2% of residents

Across the U.S., 57.3% of nursing home workers are fully vaccinated against COVID-19 (above) compared to 80.2% of residents

Currently, health officials are worried about the spread of the Indian 'Delta' variant, which makes up 83 percent of all new infections in the U.S.  

To be sure, the vast majority of fully vaccinated people who become infected with the Delta variant suffer only mild symptoms.

But 'older adults may not respond fully to the vaccine and there's enormous risk of someone coming in with the virus,' said Dr Joshua Sharfstein, vice dean for public health practice at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

'Vaccinating workers in nursing homes is a national emergency because the delta variant is a threat even to those already vaccinated,' he added. 

Nationally, data collected by CDC show that deaths and confirmed infections among nursing home staff have decreased significantly since vaccinations began in January.

But the number of deaths reported among staff have begun creeping up again, fueling new concerns.

At one memory care facility in the Grand Junction area in Colorado, 16 fully vaccinated residents were infected and four died, according to a CDC slide provided to The Associated Press.

The residents who died were described as being in hospice care, with a median age of 93, indicating they were particularly frail.


The CDC is now conducting an investigation of outbreaks in elder care facilities in Grand Junction County in May and June. 

The agency has not released the findings of its investigation publicly, but said it plans to publish the results in an upcoming Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report. 

The slide was shared with the AP by a person involved in internal deliberations, who requested anonymity because they did not have permission to release the data.

Of the 16 fully vaccinated residents infected at the memory care facility, CDC found that 13 developed symptoms, described as mild in most cases.

The CDC investigated several nursing homes in Mesa County that were experiencing new outbreaks. 

At one location - described as 'Facility A' - 42 percent of the staff were still not fully vaccinated, contrasting with only about eight percent of residents who had failed to complete their shots.

The CDC found a COVID-19 infection rate of 30 percent among vaccinated residents and staff at the facility, with residents accounting for the vast majority of cases.

Throughout the pandemic, people in long-term care facilities have carried a disproportionate burden of suffering and death, not to mention increased isolation due to lockdowns. 

Fully vaccinated older adults are more likely to get mildly ill, but are still at a higher risk of infection than the general population because they have weaker immune systems

Fully vaccinated older adults are more likely to get mildly ill, but are still at a higher risk of infection than the general population because they have weaker immune systems

COVID-19 has not been wiped out with 410 nursing home residents sickened nationwide and 146 who died the week ending July 4 (above)

COVID-19 has not been wiped out with 410 nursing home residents sickened nationwide and 146 who died the week ending July 4 (above)

It's estimated that nursing home residents represent about one percent of the U.S. population, but they account for about 22 percent of COVID-19 deaths with more than 133,400 people whose lives have been lost.

Experts generally agree that staff are one of the main triggers of nursing home outbreaks, because workers may unwittingly bring the virus in from the surrounding community before developing symptoms.

With the arrival of vaccines and an aggressive effort to get residents immunized, cases and deaths plummeted and nursing homes emerged from lockdown. But COVID-19 has not been wiped out. 

As of the week ending July 4, there were 410 residents sickened nationwide and 146 who died.

Colorado is not alone in seeing nursing home outbreaks as large shares of staff remain unvaccinated.

In Indiana, seven residents died from COVID-19 at a facility where less than half the staff - 44 percent - was fully vaccinated, said Howard County health officer Dr Emily Backer. 

Eleven additional residents tested positive in the outbreak that officials believe started in mid-June.

One of the people who died was fully vaccinated, and five fully vaccinated residents were among those who tested positive, Backer added, but did not name the facility.

Backer acknowledged that the facility's 44 percent staff vaccination rate was 'lower than we'd like.'

'But at this point, they can´t force them,' she added.

Backer said she's troubled by continued resistance to vaccination, fueled by exaggerated claims about side effects. 

In 10 states - Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Oklahoma, Tennessee and Wyoming - 50% or fewer of staff are vaccinated

In 10 states - Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Oklahoma, Tennessee and Wyoming - 50% or fewer of staff are vaccinated

Hawaii is the leader for staff vaccinations with 84% completely vaccinated but, in Louisiana, it's half that at 42% (above)

Hawaii is the leader for staff vaccinations with 84% completely vaccinated but, in Louisiana, it's half that at 42% (above)

At one facility in Grand Junction, Colorado, 16 fully vaccinated residents were infected and four died, which is linked to unvaccinated staff (file image)

At one facility in Grand Junction, Colorado, 16 fully vaccinated residents were infected and four died, which is linked to unvaccinated staff (file image)

Some experts fear that hard-won progress in putting down nursing home outbreaks could be lost, at least in some communities.

Laura Gelezunas has firsthand experience with a breakthrough case in a nursing home.

After numerous calls and emails to her mother's Missouri nursing home and the company's headquarters in Tennessee, Gelezunas finally got confirmation that her mom´s congestion, headache and sore throat were symptoms of COVID-19.

However, Gelezunas said the facility wasn't transparent about how her vaccinated mother, Joann, got sick. 

While the home has pointed to outside visitors, Gelezunas said her mother's only visitors have been her brother and his wife, who are both vaccinated.

Gelezunas believes it was an unvaccinated staff member, but the home has yet to give her answers.

Gelezunas asked that her mother interact with only vaccinated workers, but the directors said they couldn't make promises because of privacy reasons and their inability to mandate inoculations for workers.

'My mom is bedridden. I got people taking intimate care of her and you're telling me you can't tell me that at $7,500 a month that my mom can't have someone that's vaccinated take care of her,' said Gelezunas, who lives in Mexico.

Joann told her daughter that between 12 and 15 residents were infected with the virus recently, which she found out from one of her aides.

When it comes to requiring vaccinations, one obstacle is that COVID-19 vaccines aren't yet fully approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, and are being administered under emergency authorization.

'What we need to do is get past the emergency use basis, to have (vaccination) be a standard of care,' said Terry Fulmer, president of the John A Hartford Foundation, a nonprofit working to improve care for older adults.

Highlighting the potential vulnerability, government numbers show a wide disparity among states in nursing home vaccinations. 


Vermont has fully vaccinated 95 percent of its nursing home residents, but in Nevada the figure is 61 percent. 

Meanwhile, Hawaii is the leader for staff vaccinations with 84 percent completely vaccinated but, in Louisiana, it's half that at 42 percent.

Harvard health care policy professor David Grabowski said he believes trust is the core question for many nursing home staffers who remain unvaccinated.

Low-wage workers may not have much confidence in vaccine messaging from management at their facilities.

'I think some of this mirrors what we see in the overall population, but among health care workers it is really disconcerting,' Grabowski said.

Indiana county health official Backer blames swirling misinformation.

'There's a lot of really bad information out there that's completely untrue,' she said. 

'It's really sad because I think we have the power to end this with vaccination. Nobody else needs to die from this.'

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