www.zerohedge.com
Yesterday, Gov. Cuomo was urging local officials across his state to
start preparing for the reopening on May 15. On Tuesday, state health
officials reported another 1,700 previously unreported deaths from
America's nursing homes and adult-care facilities.
The revision follows a similar update made by NYC officials last
month when they confirmed an additional 3,000+ COVID-19-linked deaths,
including those who died at home and at nursing homes rather than in a
hospital setting. According to Bloomberg, NYS and Gov. Cuomo are facing "scrutiny" over the state's handling of the outbreak.
At least 4,813 people have died from COVID-19 at state-regulated
nursing homes since March 1, according to the new tally which includes
patients who were killed before they could be confirmed in a lab.
Cuomo himself has said that if he could do one thing over, he would
have taken more steps to protect the most vulnerable populations,
including groups of elderly patients in nursing homes. Whether this
updated list represents a complete accounting of nursing home deaths
remains unclear; many critics suspect that thousands of deaths among
managed-care patients likely haven't been reported.
The revised list shows that 22 nursing homes, largely in NYC and Long
Island, have reported at least 40 deaths each. Parker Jewish Institute
in Queens and Isabella Geriatric Center, one of NYC's largest nursing
homes with 705 beds, have reported the highest number of deaths: 71 and
64, respectively. Previously, Isabella showed just 13 deaths as of May
1. It now has 43 patients believed to have probably succumbed to
COVID-19. Ozanam Hall of Queens now is reporting a total of 53 deaths,
up from just 10.
Among the hardest-hit Veterans Homes, the Long Island State Veterans
Home has reported 53 deaths, including 48 confirmed and five presumed
COVID-19 deaths. The New York State Veterans Home at St. Albans in
Queens has reported 33 deaths while New York State Veterans Home at
Montrose in Westchester says 22 residents have died.
By now, the horrors of a COVID-19 outbreak inside a nursing home have
become shockingly familiar. And unfortunately, a state policy in effect
in New York and elsewhere requiring sick patients to be moved back to
their nursing homes - despite likely being infected with the virus and
well-positioned to spread it to all their fellow patients.
The state’s March 25 policy reads: "No resident shall be denied
re-admission or admission to a nursing home solely based on a confirmed
or suspected diagnosis of COVID-19."
Cuomo has for some insane reason tried to defend this policy, saying
it was intended to ensure that home residents weren't left "lingering"
in hospitals without anywhere to go. Cuomo’s spokesman tweeted Monday
that the policy follows federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services guidance, but as Bloomberg pointed out, the federal guidance
says only that a nursing home "can accept a resident diagnosed with
COVID-19”" so long as other federal transmission precautions can
absolutely be followed.
We suspect that in many New York nursing homes, that probably wasn't possible - and the state should have known better.
And amazingly, Democratic officials are trying to protect the same policy in California, according to the Mercury News.
1 則留言:
自由的資本主義社會,也有很多弊端,正如無經濟效益的範疇,係冇政黨関心的。
希望極權中共做得好過美帝啦!
張貼留言