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Ron RichterAARP updated its national Nursing Home COVID-19 Dashboard recently and the latest version suggests that nursing home residents in the Intermountain West are bearing the brunt of recent infections and death due to COVID-19. Sheridan Media’s Ron Richter has the details.
According the latest version of the dashboard, New Mexico, Utah, Nevada, Washington, Montana, and Wyoming make up six of the eight states with the highest reports of confirmed COVID-19 cases per 100 nursing home residents. New Mexico has the nation’s highest rate with 10.4 cases per 100 residents ill with COVID-19. Wyoming ranks eighth nationwide with 6.2 cases per 100 residents, or 114 cases total. Statewide, 42 percent of nursing homes confirmed a COVID-19 case among its residents in the four week period ending August 11. Alaska leads the nation with .18 deaths per 100 nursing home residents (three deaths total) attributed to COVID-19. Wyoming is tied for fourth in the country with a rate of .16. That is the same rate of COVID-19 deaths per 100 residents as the nursing home dashboard reported on June 19, after no deaths reported in the May 22 edition of the dashboard.
Alaska also leads the nation in the number of nursing home staff per 100 residents who have contracted COVID-19 with 11.28. Wyoming ranks third in the same category at 9.26 nursing home staff per 100 residents (170 confirmed cases) reporting COVID-19 illness. Wyoming’s staff COVID case rate has led to the state sporting the eighth-highest percentage of facilities reporting staff shortages of nurses or aides with half of state facilities reporting a shortage. That 50 percent number is lower than the 66 percent of nursing homes that were reporting staffing shortages during the May dashboard. According to the dashboard, 80.3% of Wyoming’s nursing home residents are reporting as fully vaccinated and boosted, placing the state in the top half of national rankings. That is significantly higher than the 41% of Wyoming’s nursing home staff who are fully vaccinated and boosted.
National Trends and Findings