From the Centers for Medicare
& Medicaid Services Website:
“CMS Announces New Measures to
Protect Nursing Home Residents from COVID-19”
As part of the broader Trump
Administration announcement today, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services (CMS) announced critical new measures designed to keep America’s
nursing home residents safe from the 2019 Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19). The
measures take the form of a memorandum and is based on the newest
recommendations from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). It
directs nursing homes to significantly restrict visitors and nonessential
personnel, as well as restrict communal activities inside nursing homes. The
new measures are CMS’s latest action to protect America’s seniors, who are at
highest risk for complications from COVID-19. While visitor restrictions may be
difficult for residents and families, it is an important temporary measure for
their protection. “As we learn more about the Coronavirus from experts on the
ground, we’ve learned that seniors with multiple conditions are at highest risk
for infection and complications, so CMS is using every tool at our disposal to
keep nursing homes free from infection,” said CMS Administrator Seema Verma.
“Temporarily restricting visitors and nonessential workers will help reduce the
risk of Coronavirus spread in nursing homes, keeping residents safe. The Trump
Administration is working around the clock to ensure the continued safety of
America’s health care system, particularly nursing homes.”
The new measures CMS announced
today, which supersede prior CMS guidance, constitute the agency’s most
aggressive and decisive recommendations with respect to nursing home safety in
the face of the spread of COVID-19. They include:
Restricting all visitors,
effective immediately, with exceptions for compassionate care, such as
end-of-life situations;
Restricting all volunteers and
nonessential health care personnel and other personnel (i.e. barbers);
Cancelling all group activities
and communal dining; and
Implementing active screening of
residents and health care personnel for fever and respiratory symptoms.
The guidance directs nursing
homes to restrict visitation except in certain compassionate cases, like
end-of-life. In those cases, visitors will be equipped with personal protective
equipment (PPE) like masks, and the visit will be limited to a specific room
only.
CMS’s guidance is based upon CDC
recommendations informed by real-time information being gathered from experts
on the ground in areas with large numbers of COVID-19 cases, like Washington
and California. According to CDC, seniors with multiple health conditions are
at highest risk for complications. With large congregations of that
particularly vulnerable population, nursing homes are extremely susceptible to
quick spread of the virus. There have already been reports of large numbers of
cases of COVID-19 spreading quickly through nursing homes, such as the Life
Care Center in Kirkland, Washington. The spread of COVID-19 in a nursing home
can amplify or seed further spread to other facilities when patients are
transferred and when staff and visitors come and go. According to CDC, visitors
and health care personnel who are ill are the most likely source of
introduction of COVID-19 into nursing homes, necessitating today’s change in
guidance to restrict visitors and personnel.
CMS understands the vital
importance of keeping nursing home residents connected with their loved ones.
However, the rapid spread of COVID-19 and its transmission through visitors and
health care workers – as well as nursing home residents’ high risk – has made
it necessary to restrict nonessential visitation in order to protect the health
and safety of residents. In lieu of visits, CMS encourages nursing homes to
facilitate increased virtual communication between residents and families. CMS
also encourages nursing homes to keep residents’ loved ones informed about
their care. This could include assigning a staff member as a primary contact
for families to facilitate inbound communications, as well as regular outbound
communications. Nursing homes are expected to notify potential visitors to
defer visitation until further notice through signage and other outreach, such
as emails and phone calls.
CDC has made several additional
recommendations for nursing homes as they work to keep their residents safe.
Nursing homes should put alcohol-based hand sanitizer with 60-95 percent
alcohol in every resident room – both inside and outside the room if possible –
and in every common area. Additionally, nursing homes should ensure sinks are
well-stocked with soap and paper towels for hand washing. They should make
tissues and facemasks available for people who are coughing, and make necessary
PPE available in areas where resident care is provided. Finally, they should
ensure hospital grade disinfectants are available to allow for frequent
cleaning of high-touch surfaces and shared resident equipment. A full list of CDC
guidance to nursing homes can be found here.
This guidance, and earlier CMS
actions in response to the COVID-19 virus, are part of the ongoing White House
Task Force efforts. To keep up with the important work the Task Force is doing
in response to COVID-19 click here www.coronavirus.gov. For information specific to CMS, please visit
the Current Emergencies Website.
^ I have family and friends in
Nursing Homes, as do millions of Americans across the country, and so it’s
important to know what is going on to protect them since they are more at risk then the rest of us. I just hope that
these new rules will still allow visitors for the terminally ill since no one
should be alone when they pass. ^
https://www.cms.gov/newsroom/press-releases/cms-announces-new-measures-protect-nursing-home-residents-covid-19
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.