It seems no one is taking COVID-19 seriously anymore, said Mollee Loveland, a nursing home aide who lives outside Pittsburgh.
Loveland has seen patients and coworkers at the nursing home where she works die from the viral disease.
Now she has a new worry: bringing home the coronavirus and unwittingly infecting her infant daughter, Maya, who was born in May.
Loveland’s maternity leave ended in late June, when Maya wasn’t yet 2 months old. Infants cannot be vaccinated against COVID-19 until they are 6 months old. Yet, children younger than that suffer the highest rates of hospitalization of any age group except people 75 or older.
Between her patients’ complex medical needs and their close proximity to one another, COVID-19 continues to pose a grave threat to Loveland’s nursing home — and to the 15,000 other certified nursing homes in the U.S. where some 1.2 million people live.
Despite this risk, a report published in April by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that just 4 in 10 nursing home residents in the U.S. received an updated COVID-19 vaccine in the winter of 2023-24. The analysis drew on data from Oct. 16, 2023, through Feb. 11.
The CDC report also revealed that during January’s COVID-19 peak, the rate of hospitalizations among nursing home residents was more than eight times that of all U.S. adults ages 70 and older.
Last winter’s low vaccination rate was partly driven by the end of the federal government paying to administer the shots, said Chicago geriatrician Rajeev Kumar.
While the vaccines remain free to patients, clinicians must now bill each person’s insurer separately. That makes vaccinating an entire nursing home more logistically complicated, Kumar said.
Kumar is president of the Post-Acute and Long-Term Care Medical Association, which represents clinicians who work in nursing homes and similar settings, such as post-acute care, assisted living and hospice facilities.
“The challenges of navigating through that process and arranging vaccinations, making sure that somebody gets to bill for services and collect money,” he said, “that’s what has become a little bit more tedious.”
In April, after the study was released, the CDC recommended that adults 65 and older get an additional dose of an updated vaccine if it’s been more than four months since their last dose. That means most nursing home patients who have had only one shot in fall or winter are not considered up to date on the COVID-19 vaccines.
Kumar and his colleagues, though, are encountering more skepticism of the COVID-19 vaccines, compared to their rollout.
“The long-term care population is a microcosm of what’s happening across the country and, unfortunately, COVID-19 vaccine reluctance remains persistent throughout the general public,” David Gifford, chief medical officer at AHCA/NCAL, which represents both for-profit and nonprofit nursing homes, said in an emailed statement. “It’s our most significant challenge.”
Nursing aide Loveland has also observed doubts and misinformation cropping up among patients at her job.
“It’s the Facebook rabbit hole,” she said.
But there are ways to push back against bad information, and states show wide variation in the proportion of nursing home residents who got vaccinated last winter.
In both North and South Dakota, for example, more than 55% of residents at nursing homes that reported data have gotten an updated COVID-19 vaccine this fall. Nationally, that share is 32%.
One major medical system operating in the Dakotas, Sanford Health, has managed more than two dozen nursing homes since a 2019 merger with the long-term care chain Good Samaritan Society.
In some of these nursing homes, more than 70% of residents were vaccinated last fall and winter — at one Sanford facility in Canton, South Dakota, the rate exceeded 90%.
Sanford achieved this by leveraging the size of the health system to make delivering vaccines more efficient, said Jeremy Cauwels, Sanford’s chief medical officer. He also credited a close working relationship with a South Dakota pharmacy chain, Lewis Drug.
But the most crucial factor was that many of Sanford’s nursing home patients are cared for by doctors who are also employed by the health system. At most Sanford nursing homes in North and South Dakota, these clinicians provide on-site primary care, meaning patients don’t have to leave the facilities to see doctors.
These employed doctors have been critical in persuading patients to stay up to date on their COVID-19 shots, Cauwels said. A medical director who worked at the Good Samaritan nursing home in Canton, for example, was a long-serving physician with close ties to that community.
“An appropriate one-on-one conversation with someone who cares about you and has a history of doing so in the past, for us, has resulted in much better numbers than other places have been able to get to nationally,” said Cauwels, who added that Sanford still needs to work on reaching more patients.
Sanford’s success shows that the onus of getting patients vaccinated extends beyond nursing homes, said Jodi Eyigor, director of nursing home quality and public policy for LeadingAge, which represents nonprofit nursing homes. She said primary care providers, hospitalists, pharmacists and other health care stakeholders need to step up.
“What conversations have occurred before they walked into a nursing home’s doors, between them and their doctors?” said Eyigor, who noted these other clinicians are also regulated by Medicare, the federal health insurance program for adults 65 and older. “Because they’re probably seeing their doctors quite frequently before they come into the nursing home.”
Nursing homes are required to educate patients — as well as staff — about the importance of the COVID-19 vaccines. Industry critics contend that one-on-one conversations, based on trusted relationships with clinicians, are the least that nursing homes should do.
But many facilities don’t seem to be doing even that, according to Richard Mollot, executive director of the Long Term Care Community Coalition, a watchdog group that monitors nursing homes. A 40% recent vaccination rate is inexcusable, he said, given the danger the virus poses to people who live in nursing homes.
A study from the Journal of Health Economics estimates that from the start of the pandemic through Aug. 15, 2021, 21% of COVID-19 deaths in the U.S. were among people living in nursing homes.
The alarmingly low COVID-19 vaccination rate, Mollot said, is a symptom of larger issues throughout the industry. He has heard from patients’ families about poor food quality and a general apathy that some nursing homes have toward residents’ concerns. He also cited high rates of staff turnover and substandard, even dangerous, care.
These problems intensified in the years since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, Mollot said — causing extensive stress throughout the industry.
“That has resulted in much lower care,” he added, “much more disrespectful interactions between residents and staff, and there’s just that lack of trust.”
Loveland, the nursing aide outside Pittsburgh, also thinks the industry has fundamental problems when it comes to daily interactions between workers and residents. She said the managers at her job often ignore patients’ concerns.
“I feel like if the facilities did more with the patients,” she said, “they would get more respect from the patients.”
That means that when administrators announced it was time for residents to get one of the newest COVID-19 vaccines this year, Loveland said, residents often simply ignored the message — even if it meant putting their own health at risk.
This article is from a partnership that includes NPR and KFF Health News.
KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF—an independent source of health policy research, polling, and journalism.