Coronavirus: Special Features
Not just COVID: Nursing home neglect deaths surge in shadows
By MATT SEDENSKY and BERNARD CONDON Associated PressWhen COVID-19 tore through Donald Wallace’s nursing home, he was one of the lucky few to avoid infection.He died a horrible death anyway.Hale and happy before the pandemic, the 75-year-old retired Alabama truck driver became so malnourished and dehydrated that he dropped to 98 pounds and looked to his son like he’d been in a concentration camp. Septic shock suggested an untreated urinary infection, E. coli in his body from his own feces hinted at poor hygiene, and aspiration pneumonia indicated Wallace, who needed help with meals, had likely choked on his food.“He couldn’t even hold his head up straight because he had gotten so weak,” said his son, Kevin Amerson. “They stopped taking care of him. They abandoned him.”As more than 97,000 of the nation’s long-term care residents have died in a pandemic that has pushed staffs to the limit, advocates for the elderly say a tandem wave of death separate from the virus has quietly claimed tens of thousands more, often because overburdened workers haven’t been able to give them the care they need.Nursing home watchdogs are being flooded with reports of residents kept in soiled diapers so long their skin peeled off, left with bedsores that cut to the bone, and allowed to wither away in starvation or thirst.Beyond that, interviews with dozens of people across the country reveal swelling numbers of less clear-cut deaths that doctors believe have been fueled not by neglect but by a mental state plunged into despair by prolonged isolation ̶ listed on some death certificates as “failure to thrive.”A nursing home expert who analyzed data from the country’s 15,000 facilities for The Associated Press estimates that for every two COVID-19 victims in long-term care, there is another who died prematurely of other causes. Those “excess deaths” beyond the normal rate of fatalities in nursing homes could total more than 40,000 since March.These extra deaths are roughly 15% more than you’d expect at nursing homes already facing tens of thousands of deaths each month in a normal year.“The healthcare system operates kind of on the edge, just on the margin, so that if there’s a crisis, we can’t cope,” said Stephen Kaye, a professor at the Institute on Health and Aging at the University of California, San Francisco, who conducted the analysis. “There are not enough people to look after the nursing home residents.”Comparing mortality rates at homes struck by COVID-19 with ones that were spared, Kaye also found that the more the virus spread through a home, the greater the number of deaths recorded for other reasons. In homes where at least 3 in 10 residents had the virus, for example, the rate of death for reasons besides the virus was double what would be expected without a pandemic.That suggests the care of those who didn’t contract the virus may have been impacted as healthcare workers were consumed attending to residents ill from COVID-19 or were left short-handed as the pandemic infected employees themselves.Chronic understaffing at nursing homes has been one of the hallmarks of the pandemic, with a few homes even forced to evacuate because so many workers either tested positive or called in sick. In 20 states where virus cases are now surging, federal data shows nearly 1 in 4 nursing homes report staff shortages.On New York’s Long Island, Dawn Best saw that firsthand. Before COVID-19 arrived at Gurwin Jewish Nursing Home, she was pleased with the care her 83-year-old mother Carolyn Best received. She enjoyed activities, from tai-chi classes to visits from a pony, and was doted on by staff.But when the lockdown started and the virus began to spread in the home, Best sensed the staff couldn’t handle what they had been dealt. The second time her mother, a retired switchboard operator, appeared on screen for a scheduled FaceTime call, she looked awful, her eyes closed as she moaned, flailed her arms above her head and just kept repeating “no.” Best insisted a doctor check her out.A few hours later, the doctor called, seemingly frantic, saying she only had a moment to talk.“The COVID is everywhere,” Best remembered her saying. “It’s in every unit. The doctors have it, the nurses have it and your mother may have it.”In the end, 59 residents at Gurwin would be killed by the virus, but Best’s mother never contracted it. She died instead of dehydration, her daughter said, because the staff was so consumed with caring for COVID-19 patients that no one made sure she was drinking.“My mom went from being unbelievably cared for to dead in three weeks,” said Best, who provided medical documents noting her mother’s dehydration. “They were in over their head more than anyone could imagine.”Representatives for Gurwin said they could not comment on Best’s case. The home’s administrator, Joanne Parisi, said “COVID-19 has affected us all” but that “our staff at Gurwin has been doing heroic work.”West Hill Health and Rehab in Birmingham, Alabama, where Wallace lived prior to his Aug. 29 death, said he was “cared for with the utmost compassion, dedication and respect.” Wallace's son provided medical documents outlining the conditions he described.The nursing home trade group American Health Care Association disputed that there has been a widespread inability of staff to care for residents and dismissed estimates of tens-of-thousands of non-COVID-19 deaths as “speculation.”Dr. David Gifford, the group’s chief medical officer, said the pandemic created “challenges” in staffing, particularly in states like New York and New Jersey hit hard by COVID-19, but added that, if anything, staffing levels have improved because of a drop in new admissions that has lightened the patient load.“There have been some really sad and disturbing stories that have come out,” Gifford said, “but we’ve not seen that widespread.”When facilities sealed off across the country in March, advocates and inspectors were routinely kept out too, all while concerning reports trickled in, not only of serious injuries from falls or major medical declines, but of seemingly banal problems that posed serious health issues for the vulnerable.Mairead Painter, Connecticut's long-term care ombudsman, said with dentists shut out, ill-fitting dentures went unfixed, a factor in mounting accounts of malnutrition, and with podiatrists gone, toenails went untrimmed, posing the possibility of painful conditions in diabetes patients.Even more widespread, as loved ones lost access to homes, was critical help with residents’ feeding, bathing, dressing and other tasks. The burden fell on aides already working tough shifts for little pay.“I don’t think anyone really understood how much time friends and family, volunteers and other people spent in the nursing home and supplemented that hands-on care,” Painter said.Strict rules barring in-person visitation persist in many homes, but as families and advocates have inched back inside, they’ve frequently been stunned by what they found.When June Linnertz returned to her father’s room at Cherrywood Pointe in Plymouth, Minnesota, in June for the first time in three months, she was struck by a blast of heat and a wall thermometer that hit 85 degrees. His sheets were soaked in sweat, his hair was plastered to his head and he was covered in bruises Linnertz would learn came from at least a half-dozen falls. His nails had been uncut so long, they curled over his fingertips and his eyes crusted over so badly he couldn’t get them open.The father, 78-year-old James Gill, screamed, thinking he had gone blind, and Linnertz grabbed an aide in a panic. She snipped off his diaper, revealing genitals that were deep red and skin sloughing off.Two days later, Gill was dead from Lewy Body Dementia, according to a copy of his death certificate provided to the AP. Linnertz always expected her father to die of the condition, which causes a progressive loss of memory and movement, but never thought he would end his days in so much needless pain.“What the pandemic did was uncover what was really going on in these facilities. It was bad before, but it got exponentially worse because you had the squeeze of the pandemic,” Linnertz said. “If we weren’t in a pandemic, I would have been in there … This wouldn’t have happened.”The assisted living facility’s parent company, Ebenezer, said: “We strongly deny the allegations made about the care of this resident,” adding that it follows “strict regulatory staffing levels” required by law.Cheryl Hennen, Minnesota’s long-term care ombudsman, said dozens of complaints have poured in of bedsores, dehydration and weight loss, and other examples of neglect at various facilities, such as a man who choked to death while he went unsupervised during mealtime. She fears many more stories of abuse and neglect will emerge as her staff and families are able to return to homes.“If we can’t get in there, how do we know what’s really happening?” she said. “We don’t know what we can’t see.”The nagging guilt of unnecessary death is one Barbara Leak-Watkins understands. It was just in February that her 87-year-old father, Alex Leak, went for a check-up and got lab work that made Leak-Watkins think the Army veteran, contractor and farmer would be with her for a long time to come.“You’re going to outlive all of us,” Leak-Watkins remembered the doctor saying.As nursing home outbreaks of COVID-19 proliferated, Leak-Watkins prayed that he be spared. The prayer was answered, but Leak was nonetheless found unresponsive on the floor at Brookdale Northwest in Greensboro, North Carolina, his eyes rolled back and his tongue sticking out.After he arrived at the hospital, a doctor there called Leak-Watkins with word: Her father had gone so long without water his potassium levels rocketed and his kidneys started failing. He’d be dead two weeks later of lactic acidosis, according to his death certificate, a fatal buildup of acid in the body when the kidneys stop working. For a man whose military service so drilled the need for hydration into him that he always had a bottle of water at hand, his daughter had never considered he could go thirsty.“The facility is short-staffed ... underpaid and overworked,” Leak-Watkins said. If they “can’t provide you with liquids and fluids to hydrate yourself, there’s something wrong.”The daughter is considering filing a lawsuit but a North Carolina law granting long-term care facilities broad immunity from suits claiming negligence in injuries or death during the pandemic could stymie her efforts. Similar laws and executive orders have been enacted in more than two dozen states.The owner of the father’s facility, Brookdale Senior Living, said it couldn’t comment on individual cases but that “the health, happiness and wellbeing of each of our residents will always be our priority.”Around the country, the heartache repeats, not only among families who have already buried a member, but also those who feel they are watching a slow-moving disaster.In Hendersonville, Tennessee, Tara Thompson was able to see her mother for the first time in more than six months when she was hospitalized in October. The 79-year-old had dropped about 20 pounds, her eyes sunken and her legs looking more like forearms. Doctors at the hospital said she was malnourished and wasting muscle. There were bedsores on her backside and a gash on her forehead from a fall at the home. Her vocabulary had shrunk to nearly nothing and she’d taken to pulling the blankets over her head.The facility Thompson’s mother lived in had been engulfed in virus outbreaks, with more than half its residents testing positive and dozens of employees infected, too. She never caught it, but shaken by the lack of care, Thompson transferred her mother to a new home.“It has nothing to do with the virus. She’s declined because she’s had absolutely no contact with anybody who cares about her,” she said. “The only thing they have to live for are their families and, at the end of their life, you’re taking away the only thing that matters to them.”“Failure to thrive” was among the causes listed for Maxine Schwartz, a 92-year-old former cake decorator whose family had been encouraged prior to the lockdown by how well she’d adjusted to her nursing home, Absolut Care of Aurora Park, in upstate New York. Her daughter, Dorothy Ann Carlone, would coax her to eat in the dining room each day and they’d sing songs and have brownies back in her room. Several times a week, Schwartz walked the length of the hallway for exercise.When the lockdown began March 13, Carlone feared what would happen without her there. She pleaded to staff: “If you don’t let me in to feed her, she won’t eat, she will starve.”On March 25, when a staffer at the home sent a photo of Schwartz, Carlone was shocked how thin she was. Carlone was told her mother hadn’t been eating, even passing up her favorite brownies.Two days later, Carlone got an urgent call and when she arrived at the home, her mother’s skin was mottled, she was gasping for breath and her face was so drawn she was nearly unrecognizable. An hour later, she died.Dawn Harsch, a spokeswoman for the company that owns Absolut Care, noted a state investigation found no wrongdoing and that “the natural progression of a patient like Mrs. Schwartz experiencing advanced dementia is a refusal to eat.”Carlone is unconvinced.“She was doing so good before they locked us out,” Carlone said. “What did she think when I wasn’t showing up? That I didn’t love her anymore? That I abandoned her? That I was dead?”Before the lockdown, Carlone’s mother would wait by an elevator for her to arrive each day. She thinks of her mother waiting there when her visits stopped and knows the pain of the isolation must have played a role in her death.“I think she gave up,” she said.--Sedensky and Condon reported from New York. AP data journalist Larry Fenn and investigative researcher Randy Herschaft contributed to this report.--Copyright Associated Press 2020
'We're in trouble': Texas sending record help, military to hospitals
By PAUL J. WEBER Associated PressAUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Texas is sending medical staff to overworked hospitals by the thousands — more now than at any point during the pandemic — as a worsening surge of cases leaves virus patients waiting for beds and large public buildings were ordered shut Wednesday in one West Texas city where fire officials are building shelves to store the dead.More doctors and nurses may still be needed as Texas rapidly accelerates toward 8,000 hospitalized COVID-19 patients for the first time since a deadly summer outbreak.“We're in trouble,” said Dr. Ron Cook, the heath authority in Lubbock County, which is averaging more than 450 new cases a day over the past week.He would not rule out the county of 320,000 residents soon needing mobile morgues like the border city of El Paso, where jail inmates have begun earning $2 an hour to transport bodies amid a skyrocketing number of virus deaths. "We’re close. The fire department has made some shelving units for us. We’ve gone to extra efforts to try to find more space,” Cook said.Texas has sent hundreds of additional doctors and nurses to Lubbock to staff overflow medical tents outside hospitals and relieve weary frontline workers. The mayor Wednesday ordered the closure of large municipal facilities through the end of the year but said he would not lockdown businesses, which Republican Gov. Greg Abbott has prohibited.As the number of cases in Texas soar, Abbott has shown no appetite for retreating to shutdown measures as he did this summer when hospitalizations were on a similarly bleak trajectory. He scheduled a news conference in Lubbock for Thursday, his first about the virus since September.Worries about the rising caseloads extended far beyond West Texas.More than 5,400 extra medical personnel have been deployed across Texas, said Lara Anton, a spokeswoman for the Texas Department of State Health Services. That doesn't capture the waves of extra help surging into Texas, as the military and volunteer outfits have also dispatched extra hands to America's second-biggest state.Leaders in Houston fear they're repeating the same grim trends as summer that filled hospitals to capacity in the nation's fourth-largest city. In East Texas, which was spared the worst of earlier surges, more than 400 extra medical staff are on the ground, according to state figures. Beth Powell, an administrator for the region's trauma system, said it was the first time in her six years on the job that such help has been sent.“There are only so many medical personnel to go around. And I think what we're seeing in places like El Paso is not sustainable for all or a large part of the state,” said Dr. Mark McClellan, a former head of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. He said the numbers suggest the time has come for incremental rollbacks, such as reduced occupancy.McClellan, who has served as an adviser to Abbott during the pandemic, expressed skepticism that a continued surge of doctors in hard-hit places was effective policy toward the goal of keeping the economy open.“People won't go to restaurants, even if they are open. If health care systems do get really stressed, you do have to take further measures. It's just they have to be more extreme and prolonged,” McClellan said.Texas has seen more than 20,140 virus deaths to date, the second highest in the county, according to researchers from Johns Hopkins University. Over the past two weeks, the rolling average number of daily new cases has increased by nearly 3,300, an increase of more than 50%.Anton said the state has not had issues obtaining staff for deployments. It can take up to two weeks for more medical personnel to arrive after help is requested, Lubbock officials say, and that staff works 12-hour shifts, six days a week after arriving. The medical contractors used across Texas are “running short on staff members,” said Joe Moudy, Lubbock County's emergency management director.“They're diligent, hard-working experts,” Cook said of the frontline medical workers in Lubbock. “But they're tired.”--Copyright Associated Press 2020
As virus cases rise, Navy limits sailors' travel, activity
By BEN FINLEY Associated PressNORFOLK, Va. (AP) — U.S. Navy bases and personnel in Virginia's Hampton Roads region were ordered Tuesday to limit travel and other activities as coronavirus cases rise.The Navy said in a statement that the order was issued by Rear Adm. Charles W. Rock of Navy Region Mid-Atlantic. It impacts the world's largest Navy base in Norfolk and several other installations throughout the region, including a large air station in Virginia Beach.Sailors' travel will be restricted to commuting from home to work, with stops only for essential goods and services such as food, medicine and child care. Dining inside restaurants is not allowed. Neither is using off-base gyms and barber shops.The order also prohibits participation in team sports and bans social gatherings in sailors’ homes that have more than 10 guests who don’t live there.“The health and safety of our Navy family is our number one priority,” Rock said in a statement. “We’ve been fighting this virus for a long time, but we’ve still got some more work to do and can’t give in to fatigue."The region's Navy installations were operating at a less restrictive level since Sept. 23.The Navy's order follows one by Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam that took effect Sunday at midnight and implemented new restrictions across the state. They include reducing the cap on gatherings from 250 people to 25 people and prohibiting alcohol sales at dining and drinking establishments after 10 p.m.“COVID-19 is surging across the country, and while cases are not rising in Virginia as rapidly as in some other states, I do not intend to wait until they are. We are acting now to prevent this health crisis from getting worse,” Northam, who is a physician, said on Friday.Over the past two weeks, the rolling average number of daily new cases in Virginia has increased by more than 20%, according to an Associated Press analysis of data from the COVID Tracking Project.There also were nearly 250 new cases per 100,000 people in Virginia, which ranks 46th in the country for new cases per capita, according to AP’s analysis. One in every 763 people in Virginia tested positive for the virus in the past week.--Copyright Associated Press 2020
Veterans Affairs reaches record-high active COVID-19 cases for more than 2 weeks, rolls out new vaccine trials
As the number of Department of Veterans Affairs patients sick from the coronavirus reaches record-high levels for more than two weeks straight, VA is also rolling out new vaccine trials and planning for massive vaccine distribution once approved.The department recorded more than 11,000 active cases on Nov. 16, a record high, and was trending toward an even higher total by the afternoon of Nov. 17. From Nov. 2-16, VA recorded its highest levels of active cases since the pandemic began, starting at 6,459 on Nov. 2 and increasing each day. The last peak in active cases at VA was on July 20, when the department recorded 6,424 cases. The increase in active cases as of this week represents an about 80% increase from the beginning of this month. October began with 3,331 active cases and ended by recording more than 5,800. Active cases at VA have jumped more than 17% in the last seven days alone. Active cases have more than doubled since this time last month and could triple if the trend continues. The vast majority of those active cases are veteran patients. On Nov. 1, VA recorded 4,000 deaths from complications caused by the virus, and since then has added more than 400, putting the department on track to reach 700 deaths by the end of November, putting it near the top of the deadliest months of the pandemic for VA patients. In August, VA recorded 825 deaths, the highest so far, followed by more than 730 in May. Since VA cares for about half of the roughly 18 million veterans in America, its numbers are representative only of those in its care and do not include veterans who receive care elsewhere or who do not qualify for VA health care. VA's overall mortality rate is about 4.8% is still more than double the about 2.2% mortality rate for Americans overall, according to the most recently available Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data, though both of those rates have fallen slightly from previous months.About eight months since VA recorded its first veteran lost to the virus the department has averaged about 17 deaths per day, roughly equivalent to the rate of veteran suicide, according to VA data.VA's mortality rate is influenced by the age and overall health of its patients, who tend to be older and less healthy than the overall American population. VA's data also includes its staff and some non-veteran patients the department treated as part of its Fourth Mission. As of Nov. 17, VA recorded 69 staff deaths, adding seven deaths so far this month. Increases in the overall number of deaths at the department appear to generally follow in the wake of trends in active cases increasing both at VA and across the United States overall.Active cases at the department fell steadily for about two months before they began to rise again in late September. The surge in active cases at VA which began in late September appears to reflect a similar increase in active cases across the country, with cases rising in the majority of states. "Trends in new cases generally reflect what is going on in the country and local communities," VA Press Secretary Christina Noel said this week.The number of patients at the department who require hospitalization -- the statistic VA cites as the most reliable judge of how it's patients are faring amid the pandemic -- has consistently fallen since a height of 38% in March, to about 15% in October and now about 13% so far this month, VA Press Secretary Christina Noel said. But the number of patients hospitalized also appears to be rising. In the latest of VA's weekly pandemic response reports for Nov. 10-16, the department recorded 855 COVID-19 inpatients, a more than doubling since October. As VA deals with growing COVID-19 counts, Noel said all department medical centers "have adequate capacity, PPE and supplies to meet current demand." VA surpassed 90,000 total cases of the virus this week, adding about 15,000 so far in November. Of VA's more than 90,000 total cases, about 83% are considered convalescent, meaning they have either recovered or passed the 14-day mark since their last positive test, and that number has continued to fall as the number of active cases has increased. The department's total case count now excedes the total number of cases confirmed in several states, such as Connecticut (87,218) and Idaho (71,359), according to CDC data. VA's total number of cases exceeds those recorded in more than 15 states. The department cares for a total of more than 9 million veterans, roughly half of the veterans in the United States, and has nearly 400,000 employees. The top 10 VA health systems with the most active cases are still primarily in the Midwest: Minneapolis (367); Milwaukee (310); Cleveland (271); Aurora, Colorado (268); Kansas City, Missouri (226); Iowa City (225); Nebraska-Western Iowa (212); Hines, Illinois (203); Columbia, Missouri (202); and Madison, Wisconsin (182). The North Chicago VA Healthcare System has recorded more than 2,400 confirmed COVID-19 cases during the pandemic. Of the 140 VA health systems the department is tracking in its publicly available data, at least 28 have recorded more than 1,000 confirmed cases, up from 21 earlier this month.The VA systems with the most deaths remain primarily areas hit hardest early in the pandemic, including New Jersey, New York, Texas Valley Coastal bend, Boston, Bronx, Phoenix, San Antonio, Cleveland, New Orleans and Columbia, South Carolina, though Minneapolis is now in the top 10 VA systems for most coronavirus-related deaths. Some VA systems have sent out advisories asking veterans to abide by new, tightening COVID-19 restrictions in their states. In Alaska, amid record-breaking numbers of virus cases "raising concerns about the health and well-being of Alaskan veterans and our health system's capacity to treat them," the Alaska VA Healthcare System said it "strongly encourages all veterans to follow the guidelines that Gov. Dunleavy established this week to stop the spread." "We understand that people are tired and frustrated," the Alaska VA system continued in its email to veterans this week. "But we must remain vigilant and prepared. We do not yet have a sure medical treatment to prevent or treat COVID_19 once a person is infected, so our best defense continues to be a good proactive offense." Noel said each VA medical center is taking precautions and considering unique circumstances in its area as the facilities make decisions about what services to provide.VA recorded 947,858 total COVID-19 tests administered nationwide during the pandemic as of Nov. 16 and has not updated that total publicly since then. That total number of tests does not reflect how many individual people have been tested at VA, but rather how many tests have been administered -- some people may receive multiple tests. VA has tested more than 630,000 individual patients and employees for the virus, Noel said, about 66% of the total tests administered. Other tests were likely those administered to the same patient or staff member more than once so far during the pandemic. In October, VA averaged more than 3,800 COVID-19 tests per day, lower than the September average of more than 4,700 per day. New vaccine trials and distribution planVA Medical Centers in Maryland, Louisiana, New York, New Mexico, Texas, Arkansas, North Carolina, Colorado, Illinois, Nevada, Florida, Georgia are among those selected to participate in a new COVID-19 vaccine trial, the fourth large-scale trial in the United States, according to department news releases. Veterans can volunteer for the studies, but researchers are asking especially for frontline and essential workers as well as Black, Hispanic and Native American volunteers. Veterans can sign up to participate here. VA is seeking those groups in particular at least in part because some veterans have been disproportionately affected by COVID-19. Results of a VA study of more than a quarter of a million veterans released late in late September showed that Black and Hispanic veterans were twice as likely as white veterans to test positive for the virus at VA, which researchers said indicated an "urgent need to proactively tailor strategies to contain and prevent further outbreaks in racial and ethnic minority communities. Department data provided to Connecting Vets this summer showed Black and Hispanic veterans made up nearly half of all VA patients who tested positive for the coronavirus, though they only comprise about 23% of all department patients.Those trends appear to reflect a disparity seen in the larger American population. A study recently released by Stanford and Duke University researchers found that Black and Hispanic patients accounted for more than half of in-hospital COVID-19 deaths.VA is also working with federal partners to plan for massive vaccine distribution once a safe and effective vaccine is approved. The department announced on Nov. 17 it is working with the CDC and other federal agencies to develop a vaccine plan "to ensure VA safely and equitably distributes vaccines once authorized." The plan will follow a phased approach and "lessons learned from past pandemic vaccine plans," VA said in its announcement. The initial phase will be a limited supply, followed by a "general implementation phase" when VA said larger supplies of the vaccine will be available for veterans if they want to receive one. “In October, staff at VA medical facilities conducted important planning exercises in preparation for the vaccine,” VA Secretary Robert Wilkie said in a statement. “These exercises help us to address vaccine distribution, allocation, safety monitoring and supply tracking.” —Veterans Affairs active COVID-19 cases reach record highs for days, doubling since OctoberAbout 17 VA patients have died of COVID-19 daily since the first veteran death 7 months agoBlack, Hispanic veterans twice as likely as white vets to test positive for COVID-19, VA study findsVA prepares for second COVID-19 wave, long coronavirus patient recovery timesReach Abbie Bennett: abbie@connectingvets.com or @AbbieRBennett.Sign up for the Connecting Vets weekly newsletter to get more stories like this delivered to your inbox.
Army Secretary: Wreaths Across America will take place at Arlington Cemetery this year
Wreaths Across America is apparently back on this year at Arlington National Cemetery.“The Secretary of the Army has directed Arlington National Cemetery to safely host Wreaths Across America,” a release from Army Public Affairs reads. “We appreciate the families and visitors who take time to honor and remember those who are laid to rest at our nation’s most hallowed ground.” Earlier, Arlington National Cemetery announced the event, set for Dec. 19, had been canceled due to concerns over COVID-19.Karen Durham-Aguilera, executive director, Office of Army National Cemeteries and Arlington National Cemetery said the decision to cancel the popular event was not made lightly. “Despite the controls developed to disperse potential crowds in time and space, and required personal safety protocols, we determined that hosting any event of this scale risked compromising our ability to accomplish our core mission of laying veterans and their eligible family members to rest.”In announcing the cancellation, Durham-Aguilera added that various options to safely execute the event had been reviewed. Numerous consultations with WAA leadership and local government and public health officials were also held, she said.Arlington National Cemetery will provide an update on the final event schedule soon the Army release states.Reach Julia LeDoux at Julia@connectingvets.com Want to get more connected to the great stories and resources Connecting Vets has to offer? Click here to sign up for our weekly newsletter.
Volunteers wanted for VA COVID-19 treatment clinical trials
The Department of Veterans Affairs has launched a nationwide effort to recruit volunteers to participate in COVID-19 vaccine trials at select VA facilities across the country. More than 50 VA medical centers are participating in trials to test vaccines and treatments for COVID-19. “Volunteering for our trials is a way people can help our country more quickly find vaccines and treatments to end the pandemic and get life back to normal,” said VA Secretary Robert Wilkie in a release. `Faces of COVID’ features veterans who died because of the coronavirusVaccines being studied by VA include candidates developed by Moderna, AstraZeneca, Pfizer and Janssen. VA’s trials for COVID-19 treatments include Remdesivir, monoclonal antibodies, Tocilizumab and others. Moderna recently announced an efficacy rate of 94% for its vaccine and Pfizer earlier said its vaccine is 90% effective in preventing the virus. Annie can help veterans cope with COVID-19 VA’s volunteer list is open to both veterans and non-veterans who are18 years old or older. Volunteers go through an informed-consent process that ensures they understand the risks and benefits to joining a study before they decide to participate. Sign up for the VA’s volunteer list here. Reach Julia LeDoux at Julia@connectingvets.com Want to get more connected to the great stories and resources Connecting Vets has to offer? Click here to sign up for our weekly newsletter.
Navy publishes scientific paper on USS Theodore Roosevelt COVID-19 outbreak
A multidisciplinary team of U.S. Navy Medicine personnel published a comprehensive analysis of the USS Theodore Roosevelt COVID-19 (or SARS-CoV-2 as it was also known at the time) outbreak of spring 2020 in the New England Journal of Medicine on Nov. 11, 2020.While preliminary findings and a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report were released in June from a limited population, this paper provides an epidemiological description of the outbreak that includes all of the crew.The paper contributes to the growing body of knowledge on the behavior of the new coronavirus and will support continued efforts to stem the impact of the virus in the Navy, in the United States and around the world.Over the course of the outbreak, 1,271 sailors (27% of the crew) tested positive for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) by rRT-PCR testing. The authors found that working in confined spaces, enlisted rank, history of angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor use, respiratory disease, and obese body mass index were associated with an increased risk of infection.In their conclusions, the authors noted SARS-CoV-2 spread quickly among the Roosevelt's crew. Transmission was facilitated by close quarters and asymptomatic and pre-symptomatically infected crew members. Nearly half of those who tested positive for the virus never developed symptoms. These findings show that young, healthy working-age adults can play a role in the spread of SARS-CoV-2."We must continue to be aggressive about studying COVID-19 and SARS-CoV-2," said co-author of the paper, Navy Lt. Cmdr. Matthew Kasper. ''It's about keeping our operational forces ready and underway, protecting the health of our personnel, while contributing to the general body of knowledge of this virus.''
COVID-19 shuts down Wreaths Across America at Arlington Cemetery
The COVID-19 pandemic has caused the cancellation of Wreaths Across America at Arlington National Cemetery and the Soldiers’ and Airmen’s Home Cemetery this year. “We did not make this decision lightly,” said Karen Durham-Aguilera, executive director, Office of Army National Cemeteries and Arlington National Cemetery in a release. “Despite the controls developed to disperse potential crowds in time and space, and required personal safety protocols, we determined that hosting any event of this scale risked compromising our ability to accomplish our core mission of laying veterans and their eligible family members to rest.” The events had been set to take place on Dec. 19.“Our strong hope is to be able to resume hosting this great event next year in 2021,” said ANC Superintendent Charles “Ray” Alexander.Two million volunteers laid wreaths at cemeteries across the nation during last year’s event. Durham-Aguilera added that various options to safely execute the events were reviewed. Numerous consultations with WAA leadership and local government and public health officials were also held. Arlington National Cemetery announces limited re-opening to the pubic “We understand that although this is disappointing for so many, we could no longer envision a way to safely accommodate the large number of visitors we typically host during this event,” she said. Century-old memorabilia box opened at Arlington Cemetery ANC’s most sacred mission to lay the nation’s veterans and their family members to rest continues during the pandemic, the release continues. Family pass holders and visitors are still welcome to visit the cemetery on their own schedules. Reach Julia LeDoux at Julia@connectingvets.com Want to get more connected to the great stories and resources Connecting Vets has to offer? Click here to sign up for our weekly newsletter.
Army reservist marks 10th service member COVID-19 death
The Department of Defense reported the tenth death of a service member due to COVID-19 on Monday. The Army reservists death marks the second so far this month.Despite this most recent death, military service members are still exhibiting far lower fatality rates than the general population. While service member deaths have now surpassed that of dependents, that mortality rate among military personnel is currently about .017%. Among dependents, the mortality rate is 0.12%.Of all DoD components, the civilian component has reported the most COVID-19 fatalities with 69 as of Wednesday, bringing the total number of deaths across the DoD to 113. Overall, after holding steady for the first few months of the pandemic, DoD COVID-19 deaths almost doubled in the month of July. As of Monday, the DoD reported a total of 99,839 cases of COVID-19 across the force. The vast majority of these cases -- as has been the case since the very beginning of the pandemic -- are among service members. Close to 67,443 service members from every branch have been confirmed as COVID-19 positive. --Reach Elizabeth Howe on Twitter @ECBHowe.Sign up here for our newsletter to get more connected to the stories and resources Connecting Vets has to offer.
'Faces of COVID' features veterans who died because of the coronavirus
On Veterans Day this year, there were no massive parades, many canceled gatherings and a stark reminder that COVID-19 is affecting veterans at higher rates than the general population. "Faces of COVID," a Twitter account curated by CEO of 90 West Alex Goldstein, features profiles of individuals across the country who have died from the coronavirus. On Veterans Day, the account featured veterans. BENNIE ADKINS, 86, of Opelika, Alabama died of COVID in April.An Army Command Sgt. Major, President @BarackObama presented him with the Medal Honor in 2014 for saving the lives of his fellow soldiers as a Green Beret in the Vietnam War. #VeteransDay2020https://t.co/QKUQwr6LtA— FacesOfCOVID (@FacesOfCOVID) November 11, 2020 WILLIAM HARDING, 78 of Carrollton OH, died April 24 of COVID.A Vietnam War vet, father, grandfather, & farmer, “If he caught your ear he would talk about peeling potatoes while on mess duty in the Navy..." #VeteransDay2020https://t.co/L1XrLYlN54 pic.twitter.com/FAuTnuzBbZ— FacesOfCOVID (@FacesOfCOVID) November 11, 2020 Every hour, the account featured a different veteran who died as a result of the pandemic. They included WWII veterans, Vietnam veterans, women veterans, sailors and soldiers from across the country. PAMELA HARRIS, a school counselor at Fort Knox Middle High School in Kentucky died of COVID-19 in September.She was a US Army veteran who worked with students in the 9th and 10th grade.https://t.co/GxTvwwAzIO— FacesOfCOVID (@FacesOfCOVID) November 12, 2020 NORMA MARTEL of Plainville, Connecticut, passed away from COVID-19 on April 24th.A US Navy veteran of the hospital corps during the Korean War, she was a beloved mother of 8, grandmother of 20, and great grandmother of 28. #VeteransDay2020 pic.twitter.com/mxGiOffe28— FacesOfCOVID (@FacesOfCOVID) November 12, 2020 "We owe a tremendous debt to our veterans for what they were willing to sacrifice, and it is unconscionable that we have let them down through grave mismanagement of this pandemic response," Goldstein said Wednesday.The number of Department of Veterans Affairs patients and staff sick because of the coronavirus has reached record highs during the first two weeks of November -- more than doubling since the same time last month. VA's overall mortality rate is about 5.2% -- still more than double the about 2.5% mortality rate for Americans overall, according to the most recently available Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data. VA recorded about 4,254 deaths from the coronavirus as of Nov. 12. --Reach Elizabeth Howe on Twitter @ECBHowe.Sign up here for our newsletter to get more connected to the stories and resources Connecting Vets has to offer.
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