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Pa. Health Department survey finds only about half of state’s nursing home staff have been vaccinated

The results show 78.8 percent of the residents living at skilled nursing facilities have gotten shots.

  • Kiley Koscinski/WESA
  • Staff
As of Tuesday, Pennsylvania reported 12,130 cases of COVID-19 inside 540 long-term care facilities. More than 2,600 residents have died.

 JESSICA GRIFFIN / Philadelphia Inquirer

As of Tuesday, Pennsylvania reported 12,130 cases of COVID-19 inside 540 long-term care facilities. More than 2,600 residents have died.

(Pittsburgh) — A high percentage of staff at Pennsylvania’s skilled-nursing facilities are still not vaccinated against COVID-19. According to the Pennsylvania Department of Health, only 52.6% of staff had been vaccinated as of April 1.

A survey done by the department found that 78.8% of the residents living at skilled nursing facilities have gotten shots.

Pennsylvania’s rate of vaccinations barely outpaces the national average, which is 50%, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Keara Klinepeter, the health department’s executive deputy secretary, said the state did not collect data about why staff haven’t been vaccinated.

“But anecdotally what we’ve heard is that there were a number of staff who didn’t want to be the first to get vaccinated. They wanted to see their colleagues [and] their families get vaccinated [first],” she said.

Here are the percentages in central Pennsylvania counties:

  • Adams: 53.5% staff, 84.3% residents
  • Berks: 48.3% staff, 76.3% residents
  • Cumberland: 49.3% staff, 80.5% residents
  • Dauphin: 47% staff, 71.5% residents
  • Franklin: 41.7% staff, 74.1% residents
  • Lancaster: 48% staff, 81.7% residents
  • Lebanon: 44.1% staff, 79.2% residents
  • Perry: 48.2% staff, 78.9% residents
  • York: 48.4% staff, 82.1% residents

JESSICA GRIFFIN / Philadelphia Inquirer

Pennsylvania emergency response officials had a plan to protect nursing homes before the coronavirus swept across the state, but it was never fully implemented. Now, many say the state still isn’t doing enough, and what it is doing might be too little, too late.

The low numbers worry state health officials. There have been more than 2,775 outbreaks in 1,586 long-term care facilities since the start of the pandemic, according to the department. A low vaccination rate among staff could threaten to cause future outbreaks in facilities.

“Staff are just out doing normal things in their life like going to the grocery store, picking their kids up,” Klinepeter said. “They may asymptomatically contract the virus and bring it into the facility. This is why we’re strongly encouraging them to be vaccinated.”

On Thursday, the health department announced a system through which facilities can vaccinate new residents and staff on an ongoing basis. Previously, facilities had to make arrangements on their own to find vaccines for new residents and staff.

The new system resumes the federal pharmacy partnership for long-term care program. The CDC program was responsible for the initial campaign targeting nursing home residents and staff, which began in December.

The facilities that will benefit from the new strategy are licensed by either the Department of Health or the Department of Human Services.

The first phase of the program in Pennsylvania, executed by CVS and Walgreens, limited participation to long-term care facilities that met specific criteria. During the second phase, if an eligible long-term care pharmacy wants to serve a facility, they may.

Klinepeter said making a system consistent statewide could increase vaccination rates among staff.

“From the beginning of the pandemic through the vaccination of residents and staff, the health and well-being of people in long-term care facilities has been a priority,” she said. “We know that COVID-19 spreads in communities where the virus is circulating, and that is why it is on all of us to ensure we are protecting our most vulnerable.”

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