CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, DECEMBER 22, 2020, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“NURSING
HOME RESIDENTS NEED HIGH VACCINE PRIORITY”
Teachers’
unions, police and firefighters argued in early December they ought to get the
expected new coronavirus vaccines before anyone else but health workers.
They got a tough response at
the federal Centers for Disease Control, now operating as it is supposed to for
the first time since Donald Trump became president. Freed after the fall
election of censorship by political operatives Trump stationed in its executive
offices, the CDC let its vaccine advisory committee of top epidemiologists and
ethics experts write the priority guidelines most states will follow in
distributing still-scarce vaccines.
They very properly placed
nursing home residents alongside medical personnel as the first recipients. But
that’s not how California now says it will operate.
Yes, health workers will be
the first Californians to get the vaccine. But not nursing home residents. This
is a huge failing in the state’s plan for prioritizing inoculations against the
plague that has killed almost 300,000 Americans – about one-third of them
living in long term care.
Yes,
just about everyone agrees front line medical responders need first crack at
the two new vaccines entering national use.
Beyond
that, things are murkier. People with underlying pre-existing medical
conditions like suppressed immune systems and heart disease ought to go next,
some academic ethicists said. Nope, said others, the vaccine should go first to
the elderly, about 65 percent of the COVID-19 patient load.
Teachers,
cops and firepeople should make up the second group, said their unions,
teachers arguing that schools can only reopen widely after they get their
shots.
This
has some validity, but ignores the one group which fits into both the medical
condition class and the elderly category: nursing home residents.
The proportion of disease
victims and the degree of isolation among denizens of nursing homes has been
staggering. Most have been deprived of virtually all direct contact with family
and friends for the 9-month (so far) duration of anti-virus lockdown measures.
For some, this causes extreme
disorientation and distress as they suffer diseases and death in isolation,
notwithstanding a few ground-floor window sightings and the occasional outdoor
visit.
The
coronavirus has also taken more lives in nursing homes than anywhere else –
about 40 percent of California deaths from the virus.
With
each viral surge, the scene in nursing homes grows more grim. Especially in
larger facilities catering mostly to Medi-Cal patients, who often turn their
life savings over to government in order to qualify for financial aid.
During
October and November, new COVID-19 cases in nursing homes surged fourfold in
more than 20 states. Unlike most others, residents of the homes can’t do much
about it.
They
cannot avoid close contact with nursing home staffers, from nurses and other
aides to administrators. Those staffers come and go daily, subject to the same
contagions as the general public. That’s why even California’s plan gives them
the same priority as other health workers.
Staffers
serve meals to residents, help them bathe, assist them to sitting areas and to
bathrooms. When they are infected, residents are, too. When caseloads outside
the homes rise, they skyrocket on the inside.
What’s
more, most residents are elderly. Few would live in skilled nursing facilities
if they did not have some pre-existing condition also making them
extra-susceptible to COVID-19.
Residents
of the 14,000 facilities belonging to the American Health Care Assn. and the
National Center for Assisted Living may be followed statistically more closely
than people in other homes. It’s from them that we learn how caseloads among
long term care residents rise faster and lead to many more deaths per capita
than on the outside.
This
all explains why the CDC committee had nursing home folks share top priority
for the new vaccinations. They may be only subsets of the elderly and people
with medical conditions, but they are the main reason statistics for those two
classes are so cruel.
If the
lives of people in the homes have value – and California’s newly-set priorities
suggest some think they don’t – they must get the new shots before anyone other
than front line medical workers.
But in California, it appears they won’t, and that is both inhumane and unfair.
-30-
Email Thomas Elias at
tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough, The Most Promising
Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It" is now
available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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