The Georgia Department of Community Health’s (DCH) June 11, 2020 Long-Term Care Facility COVID-19 report indicated that 97% of nursing home residents in facilities with 25 or more beds have now been tested for COVID-19. This marks a 12% improvement in one week. Additionally, staff testing in nursing homes is up 13% week-over-week.
Across all Long-Term Care Facilities with 25 beds or more, 74% of residents and 54% of staff members have now been tested, up 9% and 10%, respectively, in the last week.
“Nursing homes and all long-term care facilities remain critically important battlegrounds in our fight against COVID-19,” said Governor Kemp. “Thanks to the hard work of state officials from the Department of Public Health, Department of Community Health, Georgia National Guard, and Georgia Emergency Management and Homeland Security Agency, we are making significant progress in staff and resident testing while also supplying facilities with the resources and PPE that they need.”
“This pandemic has hit nursing homes across the country especially hard, and I am thankful to our team as well as private-sector partners for making every effort to protect vulnerable Georgians. In addition to encouraging testing numbers, the Department of Community Health has compiled initial reports of residents recovered from coronavirus, and we hope to see continued progress in these statistics.”
On June 4, 2020, DCH also began reporting on residents recovered across all long-term care facilities with 25 beds or more. Recovered residents data is the cumulative number of residents who previously tested positive for COVID-19 who have now recovered from the virus based on subsequent negative tests, absence of symptoms, or other appropriate criteria as assessed by the facility or otherwise ascertained.
In DCH’s initial report on residents recovered, 2,759 residents had recovered from COVID-19 out of 6,040 total residents who had tested positive. In DCH’s report Thursday, 3,269 residents have recovered from COVID-19 out of 6,259 total residents who have tested positive.
Nat Wynn
June 13, 2020 at 10:48 am
I find these numbers hard to believe. I own a medical billing company in Georgia. One practice does nothing but nursing homes. The practice has five practitioners and serves 22 nursing homes plus additional assisted living facilities.
I try to use as many ICD-10 codes as my billing system will carry and that is 12 per visit. Since the onset of the “pandemic” I have used a Covid-19 code only twice in some 70,000 codes used and that was on the same patient and both within the last week.
NELDA SMITH
June 13, 2020 at 12:04 pm
WE KNEW IN MARCH THAT HYDROXYCHLOROQUINE WAS A CURE AND A PREVENTATIVE. I HAVE TAKEN IT OFF AND ON FOR YEARS BECAUSE I DO NOT HAVE SIDE EFFECTS WITH HCQ AS I DO WITH MOST MEDS (EVEN ASPIRIN). WHY WERE NURSING HOMES NOT TREATED WITH HCQ? RUSSIA HAS TREATED EVERY RUSSIAN CITIZEN WITH HCQ. ITALY HAS BEGUN TREATING ALL THEIR CITIZENS WITH HCQ. WHY NOT THE USA? WE NEED TRUTHFUL NUMBERS WITH COVID-19 DEATHS – OF THOSE WHO DIED OF COVID-19 , NOT WITH COVID-19. WE CANT BELIEVE THESE NUMBERS.