Nurses at Bates Summit High Medical Center were out of breath as long as COVID-19 patients began reaching hospital spaces that were not reserved for their care.
KHN and The Guardian stick to the deceased physical condition of COVID-19 and write about their lives and what happened in their final days.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has called on hospitals to isolate patients with COVID to restrict staff exposure and assist missing non-public protective appliances.
Still, COVID patients continued to disperse at Oakland Hospital, to court cases filed with the California Department of Occupational Safety and Health. Concerns included the sixth-floor medical unit where veteran nurse Janine Paiste-Ponder worked.
COVID patients in this field did not stay in their rooms or disassociate the the rules. Staff did not get high-protection N95 respirators, said Mike Hill, a nurse in the hospital’s intensive care unit and a leading representative of the California Nurses Association hospital. , who filed a complaint with Cal/OSHA, the state’s occupational protection regulator.
Do you know a colleague or enjoy one who is part of the “Lost On The Frontline” series?Please share your story.
“It’s only a matter of time before one of the nurses dies on one of those floors,” Hill said.
Two sick nurses, adding Paiste-Ponder, 59, who died of headaches from the virus on July 17.
Concerns raised in Oakland also spread across the United States, according to interviews, a review of government court cases on office protection and fitness facility inspection reports. A KHN investigation found that dozens of nursing homes and hospitals were unaware of official rules for separating COVID patients from those without coronaviruses in some places, fueling their spread and leaving them unprepared and inflamed or, in some cases, dead.
Recently, in July, a National Nurses United survey of more than 21,000 nurses revealed that 32% worked in a facility that does have a compromised COVID unit. By then, the coronavirus had reached all 17 U. S. counties, according to knowledge gathered through Johns. Hopkins University.
KHN found that COVID patients have been combined with uns infected patients in physical care services in states such as California, Florida, New Jersey, Iowa, Ohio, Maryland and New York.
A COVID-19 outbreak in full swing at the New Jersey Veterans Home in Paramus last April when fitness inspectors observed citizens with dementia mingled in a day room – COVID-positive patients and others awaiting test results. the controls. reported COVID infections in 119 citizens and 46 deaths due to the virus, according to a Medicare inspection report.
The deputy director of nursing at an Iowa nursing home insisted on April 28 that they “had no COVID in the building” and overruled a network doctor’s orders to isolate several patients suffering from fever and falling oxygen levels. , according to an inspection report.
In mid-May, the facility’s COVID newspaper reported 61 patients with the virus and deaths.
Federal hard work protection officials have closed at least 30 court cases over the combination of patients in hospitals across the country without issuing a subpoena. They arrive with a statement that a Michigan hospital maintained patients with negative results for the virus in the COVID unit in May. in New York State there were also patients with COVID in the same unit as those who had no infection, according to a complaint filed with the Federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration.
Subscribe to KHN’s short morning report.
Federal social facilities and fitness officials called hospitals to let them know daily if they have a patient who arrived without COVID-19 but had an obvious or shown case of coronavirus 14 days later. Hospitals submitted 48,000 reports from 21 June to 28 August, this issue. reflects a double or additional count of individual patients.
COVID patients were combined with others for reasons: some hospitals report limited controls, so patients with the virus are only known after exposure to others; in other cases, they have received effects from false negative checks or their establishment has rejected federal guidelines, which have no force of law.
And while federal Medicare officials have inspected nearly every single nursing home in the U. S. in recent months, and states have imposed fines and dumped new admissions for periods of isolation, hospitals have been less monitored.
The Sutter scene
At Alta Bates in Oakland, a member of Sutter Health’s network, hospital staff made it transparent in official court cases before Cal/OSHA seeking directors to comply with exclusive state law on aerosol-borne diseases. looked for all the protections required through the state for a virus that has been shown to be transmitted through small components floating in the air.
Regulations require patients with a virus such as COVID-19 to be transferred to a specialized unit within five hours of their identity, or to a specialized facility. with negative air pressure, which means that air circulates through a window or extraction fan instead of moving down the aisle.
Initially in March, the hospital supplied a 40-bed COVID unit, according to Hill, but when a wave of patients failed to materialize, this unit was reduced to 12 beds.
Since then, a steady flow of patients inflamed by the virus has been admitted, he said, many of whom underwent the test a few days after admission, and after being in normal rooms on the premises.
From March 10 to July 30, hill’s and others filed 8 court cases with Cal/OSHA, adding allegations that the hospital failed to comply with isolation regulations for COVID patients, some on the cancer floor.
So far, regulators have done little. Governor Gavin Newsom had ordered occupational protection officers to “focus on. . . “”compliance support” that in law enforcement, unless it was “the most serious violations. “
State officials responded to court cases through emails and “ensuring that appropriate virus prevention measures have been implemented,” according to Frank Polizzi, Cal/OSHA spokesman.
A third investigation involving transportation personnel who were not dressed in N95 respirators when moving patients with positive or imaginable COVID coronavirus to a Sutter facility near the hospital resulted in a $6750 fine, according to Cal/OSHA records.
The series of court cases also says that the hospital did not provide the non-public protective apparatus (PPE) required by state law, an N95 respirator or anything else of protection, to care for. patients inflamed by the virus.
Instead, Hill said, on floors with COVID, patients gained lower quality surgical masks, a fear reflected in court cases filed with Cal/OSHA.
Hill believes Paiste-Ponder and the nurse on his floor beat the virus to COVID patients who didn’t stay in his room.
“He’s unhappy because he didn’t want it to happen,” Hill said.
Polizzi said investigations into the July 17 death and some other hospitalization were ongoing.
A Sutter Health spokesman said the hospital takes the allegations seriously, adding Cal/OSHA complaints, and that its most sensible priority is to ensure safety and the patient.
It also states that the “cohort”, or the practice of grouping patients inflamed by the virus, is a tool that “should be thought of in a broader context, adding patient acuity, hospital census and other environmental factors”.
Concerns in hospitals
Cdc’s rules are not strict on the issue of COVID patient separation, noting that “institutions would possibly designate complete sets within the facility, with [staff] committed to treating PATIENTS with COVID.
This technique has been a success at the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha. A recent study reported “extensive” viral contamination around COVID patients there, but noted that with “standard” infection techniques implemented, staff members who treated COVID patients did not. contract the virus.
The hospital installed an insulation unit with pumped air outside the aisles, limited access to the unit and trained to use well-developed protocols and N95 respirators, at a minimum. What worked in Nebraska, however, is far from the norm elsewhere. .
Cynthia Butler, a nurse and member of National Nurses United at Fawcett Memorial Hospital in Port Charlotte on Florida’s West Coast, said she felt safer running in the COVID unit, where she knew what she was dealing with and had a full PPE than on a general medical floor.
She believes she hit the virus on a patient who had COVID-19 but was housed on general ground in May. A similar scenario happened in July, when another patient had an unforeseen case of COVID, and Butler said she herself had other positives. Test.
She said the two patients met the hospital’s criteria for testing admitted patients and that the deficiencies left her in place, considerations she relayed to an OSHA inspector who contacted her about a complaint filed through her union about the facility.
“Every time I get to work, it’s like betting on Russian roulette,” Butler said.
A spokeswoman for HCA Healthcare, who owns the hospital, said she evaluates long-term care patients, who have surgery and those with viral symptoms, said staff have access to PPE and practice vigilant sanitation, universal masking, and social estating. .
However, the latter is an option for Butler, who has stated that it cleans, feeds and begins administering patients intravenously and is reassuring when away from their families.
“I give you the only word of convenience or kind that you can get,” said Butler, who has since taken a leave of absence without pay for safety reasons. “I do that and I am protected. “
Given studies showing that up to 45% of COVID patients are asymptomatic, UCSF Medical Center is all admitted individuals, said Dr. Robert Harrison, a professor at the University of California San Francisco School of Medicine, who consults on occupational fitness at the hospital. .
This is done to protect and decrease the spread within the hospital, he said. Those who tested positive are separated into one unit for COVID only.
And staff who have spent more than 15 minutes within 6 feet of an unidentified COVID patient wearing a less protective surgical mask are sent home for two weeks, he said.
Outside of university medicine, however, the front line turned to union leaders to push for such protections.
In Southern California, leaders of the National Health Workers Union filed a formal complaint with state hospital inspectors about the dangers posed by combined COVID patients at Fountain Valley Regional Hospital in Orange County, a component of Tenet Health. they were not tested for COVID-19 at the time of admission.
A nursing assistant spent two successive 12-hour shifts treating a patient in a general medical field that required monitoring. At the end of the shift, he told her that the patient had just tested positive for COVID.
The employee had only worn a surgical mask, not an N95 respirator or any form of eye protection, according to the complaint filed with the California Department of Public Health. The nursing assistant did not receive a COVID check or quarantine her until her next two shifts, according to the complaint.
The Department of Public Health said it could simply comment on an ongoing inspection.
Barbara Lewis, director of the union’s Southern California hospitals division, said COVID patients were on the same page as cancer patients and post-surgical patients walking the hallways to speed their recovery.
She said officials had taken steps to separate patients after the union organized a protest, spoke to local media and complained to state fitness officials.
Hospital spokeswoman Jessica Chen said the hospital had “rapidly implemented” state government-led fitness adjustments and placed some COVID patients in the same nursing unit as non-COVID patients. run on doctor’s orders, he added, and workers can access them in other parts of the community.
This contrasts, Lewis said, with high-profile examples of precautions that can be taken.
“Now we see what’s happening with baseball and basketball: they’re tested every day and treated with great caution,” Lewis said. “However, we have thousands and thousands of health workers going to paint in a very scary environment. “
Nursing faces sanctions
More than 40% of those who died from COVID-19 lived in retirement homes or service residences, the researchers found.
The patient mix was a scattered fear in nursing homes, which Medicare officials discovered when they tested infection practices at more than 15,000 facilities.
Reports highlighted the challenge at an Ohio nursing home and a Maryland home, where the state imposed a $70,000 fine for not keeping inflamed patients away. those who were not yet sick.
The Fair Havens Center, a nursing home in Miami Springs, Florida, faced sanctions.
Florida regulators cut housing admissions and the Medicare government imposed a $235,000 civil fine, according to records.
The facility’s vice president of operations told inspectors that isolating exposed patients would mean isolating the entire facility – all had been exposed to the 32 members who tested positive for the virus, the report said.
Fair Havens Center responded to a request for comment.
In Iowa, Medicare officials declared a state of “immediate danger” at the Pearl Valley Center for Care and Rehabilitation in Muscatine. There, they discovered that staff members were denying an epidemic between them, and a nursing director resurrected a network doctor. orders to pass or send citizens to the emergency room. Instead, officials found, last April, the assistant director of nursing kept COVID patients at the facility, and filed a general order from their medical director to send patients to the emergency room “if you can help. “
Meanwhile, several patients have been documented through facilities with fever and declining oxygen levels, according to the Medicare inspection report. In less than two weeks, the facility un discovered an outbreak, with 61 citizens inflamed and nine dead, according to the report.
Medicare is investigating the Menlo Park Veterans Memorial House in New Jersey, Senator Joseph Vitale said at a recent legislative hearing. Resident Council President Glenn Osborne said at the hearing that the citizens of the house were sent back to the same dormitories after hospitalizations.
Osborne, an honorably released Marine, said he had noticed that more citizens of space died than other service members of his military. Veterans’ homes in Menlo Park and Paramus, where inspectors saw dementia patients with and without the virus. be combined in a day room. anyone reported more than 180 COVID cases among citizens, 90 among staff, and at least 60 deaths.
A home spokesman said he could comment due to an ongoing dispute.
“These deaths have not happened, ” said Osborne. ” Many of these deaths were surely avoidable, in my humble opinion. “
Share this story:
Nurses at Bates Summit High Medical Center were out of breath as long as COVID-19 patients began reaching hospital spaces that were not reserved for their care.
Nurses at Bates Summit High Medical Center were out of breath as long as COVID-19 patients began reaching hospital spaces that were not reserved for their care.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has called on hospitals to isolate patients with COVID to restrict staff exposure and assist missing non-public protective appliances.
Still, COVID patients continued to disperse at Oakland Hospital, to court cases filed with the California Department of Occupational Safety and Health. Concerns included the sixth-floor medical unit where veteran nurse Janine Paiste-Ponder worked.
COVID patients in this field did not stay in their rooms or disassociate the the rules. Staff did not get high-protection N95 respirators, said Mike Hill, a nurse in the hospital’s intensive care unit and a leading representative of the California Nurses Association hospital. , who filed a complaint with Cal/OSHA, the state’s occupational protection regulator.
“It’s only a matter of time before one of the nurses dies on one of the floors,” Hill said.
Two sick nurses, adding Paiste-Ponder, 59, who died of headaches from the virus on July 17.
Concerns raised in Oakland also swept across the United States, according to interviews, a review of government court cases on office protection, and inspection reports of fitness facilities. A KHN investigation found that dozens of nursing homes and hospitals were unaware of the concerns. Official rules to separate COVID patients from those without coronavirus in some places, fueling its spread and leaving them unprepared and inflamed or, in some cases, dead.
In July, a National Nurses United survey of more than 21,000 nurses revealed that 32% worked in a facility that does have a compromised COVID unit. By then, the coronavirus had reached all 17 U. S. counties, according to knowledge gathered through Johns. Hopkins University.
KHN found that COVID patients were combined with non-inflamed patients in physical care services in states such as California, Florida, New Jersey, Iowa, Ohio, Maryland and New York.
An outbreak of COVID-19 at the height of the New Jersey Veterans Home in Paramus last April when fitness inspectors observed citizens with dementia mixed in a day room: patients with COVID positives and others waiting for the results of the checks. reported COVID infections in 119 citizens and 46 deaths from the virus, according to a Medicare inspection report.
The deputy director of nursing at an Iowa nursing home insisted on April 28 that “they had no COVID in the building” and overruled a network doctor’s orders to isolate several patients suffering from fever and falling oxygen levels. , according to an inspection report.
In mid-May, the facility’s COVID newspaper reported 61 patients with the virus and deaths.
Federal hard work protection officials have closed at least 30 court cases over the combination of patients in hospitals across the country without issuing a subpoena. They arrive with a statement that a Michigan hospital kept patients with negative results for the virus in the COVID unit in May. in New York State there were also patients with COVID in the same unit as those who had no infection, according to a complaint filed with the Federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration.
Federal social facilities and fitness officials called hospitals to let them know daily if they have a patient who arrived without COVID-19 but had an obvious or shown case of coronavirus 14 days later. Hospitals submitted 48,000 reports from 21 June to 28 August, this issue. reflects a double or additional count of individual patients.
COVID patients were combined with others for reasons; some hospitals report limited controls, so patients with the virus are only known after exposing others; in other cases, they had false negative control effects or their establishment rejected federal guidelines, which were not in force by law.
And while federal Medicare officials have inspected nearly every single nursing home in the U. S. In recent months, and states have imposed fines and eliminated new admissions for periods of isolation, hospitals have been fewer. monitored.
The Sutter scene
At Alta Bates in Oakland, a member of Sutter Health’s network, hospital staff made it transparent in official court cases before Cal/OSHA seeking directors to comply with exclusive state law on aerosol-borne diseases. looked for all the protections required through the state for a virus that has been shown to be transmitted through small components floating in the air.
Regulations require patients with a virus such as COVID-19 to be transferred to a specialized unit within five hours of their identity, or to a specialized facility. with negative air pressure, which means that air circulates through a window or extraction fan instead of moving down the aisle.
Initially, in March, the hospital supplied a 40-bed COVID unit, according to Hill, but when a wave of patients did not materialize, this unit was reduced to 12 beds.
Since then, a steady flow of patients inflamed by the virus has been admitted, he said, many of whom underwent the test a few days after admission, and after being in normal rooms of the facility.
From March 10 to July 30, Hill’s union and others filed 8 court cases with Cal / OSHA, adding allegations that the hospital violated isolation regulations for COVID patients, some of them for cancerous reasons.
So far, regulators have done little. Governor Gavin Newsom had ordered occupational protection officers to “focus on. . . “support for compliance “that in law enforcement, unless it was “the most serious violations. “
State officials responded to court cases through emails and “ensuring that appropriate virus prevention measures have been implemented,” according to Frank Polizzi, Cal/OSHA spokesman.
A third investigation involving transportation personnel who were not dressed in N95 respirators when moving patients with positive or imaginable COVID coronavirus to a Sutter facility near the hospital resulted in a $6750 fine, according to Cal/OSHA records.
The court case series also indicates that the hospital failed to provide the required non-public protective apparatus (PPE) under state law, an N95 respirator or something more protective, to treat patients inflamed with the virus.
Instead, Hill said, on floors with COVID, patients gained lower quality surgical masks, a fear reflected in court cases filed with Cal/OSHA.
Hill believes Paiste-Ponder and the nurse on his floor beat the virus to COVID patients who didn’t stay in his room.
“He’s unhappy because he didn’t want it to happen,” Hill said.
Polizzi said investigations into the July 17 death and some other hospitalizations were ongoing.
A Sutter Health spokesman said the hospital takes the allegations seriously, adding Cal/OSHA complaints, and that its most sensible priority is to ensure safety and the patient.
It also states that the “cohort”, or the practice of grouping patients inflamed by the virus, is a tool that “should be thought of in a broader context, adding patient acuity, hospital census and other environmental factors”.
Concerns in hospitals
CDC rules are not strict on the issue of separation of COVID patients, noting that “institutions would possibly designate complete sets within the facility, with [staff] engaged” to treat COVID patients.
This technique has been a success at the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha. A recent examination reported “extensive” viral contamination around COVID patients there, but noted that with “standard” infection techniques implemented, staff members who treated COVID patients did not. contract the virus.
The hospital installed an insulation unit with pumped air outside the aisles, limited access to the unit and trained to use well-developed protocols and N95 respirators, at a minimum. What worked in Nebraska, however, is far from the norm elsewhere. .
Cynthia Butler, a nurse and a member of National Nurses United at Fawcett Memorial Hospital in Port Charlotte, on the west coast of Florida, said she felt safer running in the COVID unit, where she knew what she was dealing with and had full PPE, than in a general medical floor.
She believes she hit the virus on a patient who had COVID-19 but was housed on general ground in May. A similar scenario happened in July, when another patient had an unforeseen case of COVID, and Butler said she herself had other positives. Test.
She said patients did not meet the hospital’s criteria for evaluating admitted patients and that they left her on site, considerations she passed on to an OSHA inspector who contacted her about a complaint filed through her union about the facility.
“Every time I get to work, it’s like playing Russian roulette,” Butler said.
A spokesperson for HCA Healthcare, which owns the hospital, said it is evaluating patients coming in for long-term care, those undergoing surgery and those with viral symptoms. He said members have access to PPE and practice vigilant sanitation, universal masking and social distancing.
However, butler is an option for Butler, who has stated that he cleans, feeds and begins administering patients intravenously and provides insurance when he moves away from their families.
“I give you the only word of convenience or type you can get,” said Butler, who has since taken a leave of no salary for security reasons. “I’m doing this and I’m protected. “
Given studies showing that up to 45% of COVID patients are asymptomatic, UCSF Medical Center is all admitted individuals, said Dr. Robert Harrison, a professor at the University of California San Francisco School of Medicine, who consults on occupational fitness at the hospital. .
This is done to protect and decrease the spread within the hospital, he said. Those who tested positive are separated into one unit for COVID only.
And staff who have spent more than 15 minutes within 6 feet of an unidentified COVID patient wearing a less protective surgical mask are sent home for two weeks, he said.
Outside of university medicine, however, the front line turned to union leaders to push for such protections.
In Southern California, leaders of the National Union of Health Workers filed a formal complaint with state hospital inspectors about the dangers posed by COVID patients combined at Fountain Valley Regional Hospital in Orange County, a member of Tenet Health’s for-profit organization. The complaint, patients were not evaluated for COVID-19 at the time of admission.
A nursing assistant spent two successive 12-hour shifts treating a patient in a general medical field that required monitoring. At the end of the shift, he told her that the patient had just tested positive for COVID.
According to the complaint filed with the California Department of Public Health, the employee had only worn a surgical mask, not an N95 respirator or any form of eye protection. according to the complaint.
The Department of Public Health said it could only comment on an ongoing inspection.
Barbara Lewis, director of the union’s Southern California hospital division, said COVID patients were at the same time as cancer patients and post-surgical patients who sizing the aisles to speed up their recovery.
She said officials had taken steps to separate patients after the union organized a protest, spoke to local media, and complained to state fitness officials.
Hospital spokeswoman Jessica Chen said the hospital had “quickly implemented” state-run fitness adjustments and placed some COVID patients in the same nursing unit as patients without COVID. administered on the doctor’s orders, he added, and workers can access them in other parts of the community.
This contrasts, Lewis said, with high-profile examples of precautions that can be taken.
“Now we see what happens to baseball and basketball: they are tested every day and treated with great caution,” Lewis said. “However, we have thousands and thousands of physical care staff who will paint in a very frightening environment. “
Nursing faces sanctions
More than 40% of those who died from COVID-19 lived in retirement homes or service homes, according to investigators.
The patient mix was a scattered fear in nursing homes, which Medicare officials discovered when they tested infection practices at more than 15,000 facilities.
Reports have highlighted the challenge at an Ohio nursing home and a Maryland home where the state has fined $ 70,000 for failing to keep inflamed patients away from those who were not yet in poor health.
The Fair Havens Center, a nursing home in Miami Springs, Florida, faced sanctions.
Florida regulators cut home admissions and the Medicare government imposed a civil penalty of $ 235,000, records show.
The facility’s vice president of operations told inspectors that isolating exposed patients would mean isolating the entire facility – all of the people exposed to the 32 staff members who tested positive for the virus, according to the report.
Fair Havens Center responded to a request for feedback.
In Iowa, Medicare officials have declared an “immediate danger” status at the Pearl Valley Care and Rehabilitation Center in Muscatine. There, they discovered that staff members denied an outbreak between them, and a nursing director rescinded a network doctor’s orders to pass the expiration or send citizens to the emergency room. Instead, officials found last April that the assistant nursing officer kept COVID patients at the facility, bringing a general order from their medical director to send patients to the emergency room “if it can help. “
Meanwhile, center staff have documented that several patients have fever and low oxygen levels, according to the Medicare inspection report. In less than two weeks, the facility un discovered an outbreak, with 61 citizens inflamed and nine dead, according to the report.
Medicare is investigating the Menlo Park Veterans Memorial House in New Jersey, Senator Joseph Vitale said at a recent legislative hearing. Resident Council President Glenn Osborne said at the hearing that the citizens of the house were sent back to the same dormitories after hospitalizations.
Osborne, an honorably liberated Marine, said he had noticed that more citizens in space died than other members of his army service. Veterans’ homes in Menlo Park and Paramus, where inspectors saw dementia patients with and without the virus combine in a day room. anyone reported more than 180 cases of COVID among citizens, 90 among staff and at least 60 deaths.
A home spokesman said he could comment due to an ongoing dispute.
“These deaths have not happened, ” said Osborne. ” Many of these deaths were surely avoidable, in my humble opinion. “
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has called on hospitals to isolate patients with COVID to restrict staff exposure and assist missing non-public protective appliances.
Still, COVID patients continued to disperse at Oakland Hospital, to court cases filed with the California Department of Occupational Safety and Health. Concerns included the sixth-floor medical unit where veteran nurse Janine Paiste-Ponder worked.
COVID patients in this field did not stay in their rooms or disassociate the the rules. Staff did not get high-protection N95 respirators, said Mike Hill, a nurse in the hospital’s intensive care unit and a leading representative of the California Nurses Association hospital. , who filed a complaint with Cal/OSHA, the state’s occupational protection regulator.
Nurses at Bates Summit High Medical Center were out of breath as long as COVID-19 patients began appearing in hospital spaces that were not reserved for treatment.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has called on hospitals to isolate patients with COVID to restrict staff exposure and assist missing non-public protective appliances.
Still, COVID patients continued to disperse at Oakland Hospital, to court cases filed with the California Department of Occupational Safety and Health. Concerns included the sixth-floor medical unit where veteran nurse Janine Paiste-Ponder worked.
COVID patients in this field did not stay in their rooms, nor did they disassociate the the rules. Staff did not get high-protection N95 respirators, said Mike Hill, a nurse in the hospital’s intensive care unit and a representative leader of the California Nurses Association, who filed a complaint with Cal/OSHA, the state’s occupational protection regulator.
“It’s only a matter of time before one of the nurses dies on one of those floors,” Hill said.
Two sick nurses, adding Paiste-Ponder, 59, who died of headaches from the virus on July 17.
Concerns raised in Oakland also spread across the United States, according to interviews, a review of government court cases on office protection and fitness facility inspection reports. A KHN investigation found that dozens of nursing homes and hospitals were unaware of official rules for separating COVID patients from those without coronaviruses in some places, fueling their spread and leaving them unprepared and inflamed or, in some cases, dead.
Recently, in July, a National Nurses United survey of more than 21,000 nurses found that 32% of the paintings in an establishment that does have a committed COVID unit. By that time, the coronavirus had reached all 17 counties in the US. According to the knowledge collected through Johns. Hopkins University.
KHN found that COVID patients were mixed with non-inflamed patients in physical care services in states such as California, Florida, New Jersey, Iowa, Ohio, Maryland and New York.
An outbreak of COVID-19 at the height of the New Jersey Veterans Home in Paramus last April when fitness inspectors observed citizens with dementia mixed in a day room: patients with COVID positives and others waiting for the results of the checks. reported COVID infections in 119 citizens and 46 deaths from the virus, according to a Medicare inspection report.
The assistant director of nursing at an Iowa nursing home insisted on April 28 that they “did not have COVID in the building” and overstealed a network doctor’s orders to isolate several patients suffering from fever and low oxygen levels, according to an inspection report.
In mid-May, the facility’s COVID newspaper reported 61 patients with the virus and deaths.
Federal hard work protection officials have closed at least 30 court cases over the combination of patients in hospitals across the country without issuing a subpoena. They arrive with a statement that a Michigan hospital kept patients with negative results for the virus in the COVID unit in May. in New York State there were also patients with COVID in the same unit as those who had no infection, according to a complaint filed with the Federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration.
Federal social facilities and fitness officials called hospitals to let them know daily if they have a patient who arrived without COVID-19 but had an obvious or shown case of coronavirus 14 days later. Hospitals submitted 48,000 reports from 21 June to 28 August, this issue. reflects a double or additional count of individual patients.
COVID patients were combined with others for reasons; some hospitals report limited controls, so patients with the virus are only known after exposing others; in other cases, they had false negative control effects or their establishment rejected federal guidelines, which were not effective. law.
And while federal Medicare officials have inspected nearly every single nursing home in the U. S. in recent months, and states have imposed fines and waived new admissions for periods of isolation, hospitals have been fewer. guarded.
The Sutter scene
At Alta Bates in Oakland, a member of Sutter Health’s network, hospital staff made it transparent in official court cases before Cal/OSHA seeking directors to comply with exclusive state law on aerosol-borne diseases. looked for all the protections required through the state for a virus that has been shown to be transmitted through small components floating in the air.
Regulations require patients with a virus such as COVID-19 to be transferred to a specialized unit within five hours of their identity, or to a specialized facility. with negative air pressure, which means that air circulates through a window or extraction fan instead of moving down the aisle.
Initially, in March, the hospital supplied a 40-bed COVID unit, according to Hill, but when a wave of patients failed to materialize, this unit was reduced to 12 beds.
Since then, a steady flow of patients inflamed by the virus has been admitted, he said, many of whom underwent the test a few days after admission, and after being in normal rooms on the premises.
From March 10 to July 30, Hill’s union and others filed 8 court cases with Cal / OSHA, adding allegations that the hospital violated isolation regulations for COVID patients, some of them for cancerous reasons.
So far, regulators have done little. Governor Gavin Newsom had ordered occupational protection officers to “focus on. . . “”compliance support” that in law enforcement, unless it was “the most serious violations. “
State officials responded to court cases through emails and “ensuring that appropriate virus prevention measures have been implemented,” according to Frank Polizzi, Cal/OSHA spokesman.
A third investigation involving transportation personnel who did not use N95 respirators when transferring patients with positive or imaginable COVID coronavirus to a Sutter facility near the hospital resulted in a $6750 fine, according to Cal/OSHA records.
The series of court cases also says that the hospital did not provide the non-public protective apparatus (PPE) required by state law, an N95 respirator or something more protective, to treat patients. patients inflamed with the virus.
Instead, Hill said, on floors with COVID, patients gained lower quality surgical masks, a fear reflected in court cases filed with Cal/OSHA.
Hill believes Paiste-Ponder and the nurse on his floor beat the virus to COVID patients who didn’t stay in his room.
“He’s unhappy because he didn’t want it to happen,” Hill said.
Polizzi said investigations into the July 17 death and some other hospitalization were ongoing.
A Sutter Health spokesman said the hospital takes the allegations seriously, adding Cal/OSHA complaints, and that its most sensible priority is to ensure safety and the patient.
It also states that the “cohort”, or the practice of grouping patients inflamed by the virus, is a tool that “should be thought of in a broader context, adding patient acuity, hospital census and other environmental factors”.
Concerns in hospitals
Cdc’s rules are not strict on the issue of COVID patient separation, noting that “institutions would possibly designate complete sets within the facility, with [staff] committed to treating PATIENTS with COVID.
This technique was a success at the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha. A recent survey reported “widespread” viral contamination around COVID patients there, but noted that with “standard” infection techniques in place, staff members who were concerned about COVID patients did not contract the virus.
The hospital installed an insulation unit with pumped air outside the aisles, limited access to the unit and trained to use well-developed protocols and N95 respirators, at a minimum. What worked in Nebraska, however, is far from the norm elsewhere. .
Cynthia Butler, a nurse and member of National Nurses United at Fawcett Memorial Hospital in Port Charlotte on Florida’s West Coast, said she felt safer running in the COVID unit, where she knew what she was dealing with and had a full PPE than on a general medical floor.
She believes she hit the virus on a patient who had COVID-19 but was housed on general ground in May. A similar scenario happened in July, when another patient had an unforeseen case of COVID, and Butler said she herself had other positives. Test.
She said patients did not meet the hospital’s criteria for evaluating admitted patients and that they left her on site, considerations she passed on to an OSHA inspector who contacted her about a complaint filed through her union about the facility.
“Every time I get to work, it’s like betting on Russian roulette,” Butler said.
A spokesperson for HCA Healthcare, which owns the hospital, said it assesses long-term care patients, those who want surgery, and those with viral symptoms, asserting that staff have access to PPE and practice vigilant sanitation, universal masking, and social services. distancing.
However, butler is an option for Butler, who has stated that he cleans, feeds and begins administering patients intravenously and provides insurance when he moves away from their families.
“I give you the only word of convenience or kind you can get,” said Butler, who has since taken a leave of absence without pay for safety reasons. “I am doing this and I am protected. “
Given studies showing that up to 45% of COVID patients are asymptomatic, UCSF Medical Center is all admitted individuals, said Dr. Robert Harrison, a professor at the University of California San Francisco School of Medicine, who consults on occupational fitness at the hospital. .
This is done to protect and decrease the spread within the hospital, he said. Those who tested positive are separated into one unit for COVID only.
And staff who have spent more than 15 minutes within 6 feet of an unidentified COVID patient wearing a less protective surgical mask are sent home for two weeks, he said.
Outside of university medicine, however, the front line turned to union leaders to push for such protections.
In Southern California, leaders of the National Union of Health Workers filed a formal complaint with state hospital inspectors about the dangers posed by COMBINED COVID patients at Fountain Valley Regional Hospital in Orange County, a component of Tenet Health. were not evaluated for COVID-19 at the time of admission.
An auxiliary nurse spent two successive 12-hour shifts treating a patient in a general medicine field that required supervision. At the end of the shift, he said the patient had just tested positive for COVID.
The employee had only worn a surgical mask, not an N95 respirator or any form of eye protection, according to the complaint filed with the California Department of Public Health. according to the complaint.
The Department of Public Health said it could only comment on an ongoing inspection.
Barbara Lewis, director of the union’s Southern California hospital division, said COVID patients were at the same time as cancer patients and post-surgical patients who sizing the aisles to speed up their recovery.
She said officials had taken steps to separate patients after the union organized a protest, spoke to local media, and complained to state fitness officials.
Hospital spokeswoman Jessica Chen said the hospital had “rapidly implemented” state government-led fitness adjustments and placed some COVID patients in the same nursing unit as non-COVID patients. run on the doctor’s orders, he added, and can be accessed by workers in other parts of the community.
This contrasts, Lewis said, with high-profile examples of precautions that can be taken.
“Now we see what happens to baseball and basketball: they are tested every day and treated with great caution,” Lewis said. “However, we have thousands and thousands of physical care staff who will paint in a very frightening environment. “
Nursing faces sanctions
More than 40% of those who died from COVID-19 lived in retirement homes or service homes, according to investigators.
The patient mix was a scattered fear in nursing homes, which Medicare officials discovered when they tested infection practices at more than 15,000 facilities.
Reports highlighted the challenge at an Ohio nursing home and a Maryland home, where the state imposed a $70,000 fine for keeping inflamed patients away from those who were not yet sick.
The Fair Havens Center, a nursing home in Miami Springs, Florida, has faced sanctions.
Florida regulators cut housing admissions and the Medicare government imposed a $235,000 civil fine, according to records.
The facility’s vice president of operations told inspectors that isolating exposed patients would mean isolating the entire facility – everyone exposed to the 32 staff members who tested positive for the virus, according to the report.
Fair Havens Center responded to a request for feedback.
In Iowa, Medicare officials declared a state of “immediate danger” at the Pearl Valley Center for Care and Rehabilitation in Muscatine. There, they discovered that staff members were denying an epidemic between them, and a nursing director resurrected a network doctor. orders to pass or send citizens to the emergency room. Instead, officials found, last April, the assistant director of nursing kept COVID patients at the facility, and filed a general order from their medical director to send patients to the emergency room “if you can help. “
Meanwhile, it has been documented at the center that several patients had fever and declining oxygen levels, according to the Medicare inspection report. In less than two weeks, the center discovered an outbreak, with 61 citizens inflamed and nine dead, according to the report.
Medicare is investigating the Menlo Park Veterans Memorial House in New Jersey, Senator Joseph Vitale said at a recent legislative hearing. Resident Council President Glenn Osborne said at the hearing that the citizens of the house were sent back to the same dormitories after hospitalizations.
Osborne, a marine released with honor, said he had noticed that more citizens in space died than other members of his army service. Veterans’ homes in Menlo Park and Paramus, where inspectors saw dementia patients with and without the virus combine in a day room. anyone reported more than 180 cases of COVID among citizens, 90 among staff and at least 60 deaths.
A spokesperson for the houses said they could comment due to an ongoing dispute.
“These deaths have not happened, ” said Osborne. ” Many of these deaths were surely avoidable, in my humble opinion. “
“It’s only a matter of time before one of the nurses dies on one of those floors,” Hill said.
Two sick nurses, adding Paiste-Ponder, 59, who died of headaches from the virus on July 17.
Concerns raised in Oakland have also spread throughout the United States, according to interviews, a review of government court cases on office protection and inspection reports of fitness facilities. Research by KHN found that dozens of nursing homes and hospitals ignored official rules to separate COVID patients from those without coronaviruses, fueling their spread in some places and leaving them unprepared and inflamed or, in some cases, death.
Recently, in July, a National Nurses United survey of more than 21,000 nurses found that 32% of the paintings in an establishment that does have a committed COVID unit. By that time, the coronavirus had reached all 17 counties in the US. According to the knowledge collected through Johns. Hopkins University.
KHN has found that COVID patients have been combined with uninfected patients in health care services in states such as California, Florida, New Jersey, Iowa, Ohio, Maryland and New York.
An outbreak of COVID-19 at the height of the New Jersey Veterans Home in Paramus last April when fitness inspectors observed citizens with dementia mixed in a day room: patients with COVID positives and others waiting for the results of the checks. reported COVID infections in 119 citizens and 46 deaths from the virus, according to a Medicare inspection report.
The nursing director of an Iowa nursing home insisted on April 28 that they “did not have COVID in the building” and overstealed a network doctor’s orders to isolate several patients suffering from fever and declining oxygen levels, according to an inspection report.
In mid-May, the facility’s COVID newspaper reported 61 patients with the virus and deaths.
Federal hard work protection officials have closed at least 30 court cases over the combination of patients in hospitals across the country without issuing a subpoena. They arrive with a statement that a Michigan hospital kept patients with negative results for the virus in the COVID unit in May. in New York State there were also patients with COVID in the same unit as those who had no infection, according to a complaint filed with the Federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration.
Nurses at Bates Summit High Medical Center were out of breath as long as COVID-19 patients began reaching hospital spaces that were not reserved for their care.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has called on hospitals to isolate patients with COVID to restrict staff exposure and assist missing non-public protective appliances.
Still, COVID patients continued to disperse at Oakland Hospital, to court cases filed with the California Department of Occupational Safety and Health. Concerns included the sixth-floor medical unit where veteran nurse Janine Paiste-Ponder worked.
COVID patients in this field did not stay in their rooms, nor did they disassociate the the rules. Staff did not get high-protection N95 respirators, said Mike Hill, a nurse in the hospital’s intensive care unit and a representative leader of the California Nurses Association, who filed a complaint with Cal/OSHA, the state’s occupational protection regulator.
“It’s only a matter of time before one of the nurses dies on one of those floors,” Hill said.
Two sick nurses, adding Paiste-Ponder, 59, who died of headaches from the virus on July 17.
Concerns raised in Oakland also spread across the United States, according to interviews, a review of government court cases on office protection and fitness facility inspection reports. A KHN investigation found that dozens of nursing homes and hospitals were unaware of official rules for separating COVID patients from those without coronaviruses in some places, fueling their spread and leaving them unprepared and inflamed or, in some cases, dead.
Recently, in July, a National Nurses United survey of more than 21,000 nurses found that 32% of the paintings in an establishment that does have a committed COVID unit. By that time, the coronavirus had reached all 17 counties in the US. According to the knowledge collected through Johns. Hopkins University.
KHN found that COVID patients were combined with non-inflamed patients in physical care services in states such as California, Florida, New Jersey, Iowa, Ohio, Maryland and New York.
An outbreak of COVID-19 at the height of the New Jersey Veterans Home in Paramus last April when fitness inspectors observed citizens with dementia mixed in a day room: patients with COVID positives and others waiting for the results of the checks. reported COVID infections in 119 citizens and 46 deaths from the virus, according to a Medicare inspection report.
The assistant director of nursing at an Iowa nursing home insisted on April 28 that they “did not have COVID in the building” and overstealed a network doctor’s orders to isolate several patients suffering from fever and declining oxygen levels, according to an inspection report.
In mid-May, the facility’s COVID newspaper reported 61 patients with the virus and deaths.
Federal hard work protection officials have closed at least 30 court cases over the combination of patients in hospitals across the country without issuing a subpoena. They arrive with a statement that a Michigan hospital maintained patients with negative results for the virus in the COVID unit in May. in New York State there were also patients with COVID in the same unit as those who had no infection, according to a complaint filed with the Federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration.
Federal social facilities and fitness officials called hospitals to let them know daily if they had a patient who arrived without COVID-19 but had an obvious or shown case of coronavirus 14 days later. The hospitals submitted 48,000 reports from 21 June to 28 August, this issue. reflects a double or additional count of individual patients.
COVID patients were combined with others for reasons; some hospitals report limited controls, so patients with the virus are only known after exposing others; in other cases, they had false negative control effects or their establishment rejected federal guidelines, which were not in force by law.
And while federal Medicare officials have inspected almost every single U. S. nursing home, the U. S. has inspected most of the world’s homes. But it’s not the first time In recent months and states have imposed fines and have been disposed of new admissions for periods of isolation, hospitals have been less monitored.
The Sutter scene
At Alta Bates in Oakland, which is a component of the Sutter Health Network, hospital staff have made it transparent in official court cases before Cal/OSHA that require directors to follow exclusive state disease law. transmitted via aerosol. From the beginning, some staff members looked for all the protections the state needed for a virus that has been shown to be transmitted through small components floating in the air.
Regulations require patients with a virus such as COVID-19 to be transferred to a specialized unit within five hours of identification, or to a specialized facility. with negative air pressure, which means that air circulates through a window or extraction fan instead of moving down the aisle.
Initially, in March, the hospital supplied a 40-bed COVID unit, according to Hill, but when a wave of patients did not materialize, this unit was reduced to 12 beds.
Since then, a steady stream of virus-inflamed patients has been admitted, he said, many of whom underwent the test within days of admission, and after being in normal rooms at the facility.
From March 10 to July 30, hill’s and others filed 8 court cases with Cal/OSHA, adding allegations that the hospital failed to comply with isolation regulations for COVID patients, some on the cancer floor.
So far, regulators have done little. Governor Gavin Newsom had ordered occupational protection officers to “focus on. . . “support for compliance “that in law enforcement, unless it was “the most serious violations. “
State officials responded to court cases through emails and “ensuring that appropriate virus prevention measures have been implemented,” according to Frank Polizzi, Cal/OSHA spokesman.
A third investigation involving transportation personnel who did not use N95 respirators when transferring patients with positive or imaginable COVID coronavirus to a Sutter facility near the hospital resulted in a $6750 fine, according to Cal/OSHA records.
The series of court cases also indicates that the hospital did not provide the mandatory non-public protective apparatus (PPE) under state law, an N95 respirator or something more protective, to care for patients inflamed with the virus.
Instead, Hill said, on floors with COVID, patients gained lower quality surgical masks, a fear reflected in court cases filed with Cal/OSHA.
Hill believes Paiste-Ponder and the nurse on his floor beat the virus to COVID patients who didn’t stay in his room.
“He’s unhappy because he didn’t want it to happen,” Hill said.
Polizzi said investigations into the July 17 death and some other hospitalization were ongoing.
A Sutter Health spokesman said the hospital takes the allegations seriously, adding Cal/OSHA complaints, and that its most sensible priority is to ensure safety and the patient.
It also states that the “cohort”, or the practice of grouping patients inflamed by the virus, is a tool that “should be thought of in a broader context, adding patient acuity, hospital census and other environmental factors”.
Concerns in hospitals
CDC rules are not strict on the issue of separation of COVID patients, noting that “institutions would possibly designate complete sets within the facility, with [staff] engaged” to treat COVID patients.
This technique has been a success at the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha. A recent study reported “extensive” viral contamination around COVID patients there, but noted that with “standard” infection techniques implemented, staff members who treated COVID patients did not. contract the virus.
The hospital installed an insulation unit with pumped air outside the aisles, limited access to the unit and trained to use well-developed protocols and N95 respirators, at a minimum. What worked in Nebraska, however, is far from the norm elsewhere. .
Cynthia Butler, a nurse and a member of National Nurses United at Fawcett Memorial Hospital in Port Charlotte, on Florida’s west coast, said she felt safer running in the COVID unit, where she knew what she was dealing with and had full PPE, than in a general medical floor.
She believes she hit the virus on a patient who had COVID-19 but was housed on general ground in May. A similar scenario occurred in July, when another patient had an unforeseen case of COVID, and Butler said she herself had tested positive again.
She said patients did not meet the hospital’s criteria for evaluating admitted patients and that they left her on site, considerations she passed on to an OSHA inspector who contacted her about a complaint filed through her union about the facility.
“Every time I get to work, it’s like betting on Russian roulette,” Butler said.
A spokeswoman for HCA Healthcare, who owns the hospital, said she evaluates long-term care patients, who have surgery and those with viral symptoms, said staff have access to PPE and practice vigilant sanitation, universal masking, and social estating. .
However, butler is an option for Butler, who has stated that he cleans, feeds and begins administering patients intravenously and provides insurance when he moves away from their families.
“I give you the only word of convenience or type you can get,” said Butler, who has since taken an unscathed leave for security reasons. “I’m doing this and I’m protected. “
Given studies showing that up to 45% of COVID patients are asymptomatic, UCSF Medical Center is all admitted individuals, said Dr. Robert Harrison, a professor at the University of California San Francisco School of Medicine, who consults on occupational fitness at the hospital. .
This is done to protect and decrease the spread within the hospital, he said. Those who tested positive are separated into one unit for COVID only.
And staff who have spent more than 15 minutes within 6 feet of a COVID patient not yet identified with a less protective surgical mask are sent home for two weeks, he said.
Outside of university medicine, however, the front line turned to union leaders to push for such protections.
In Southern California, leaders of the National Union of Health Workers filed a formal complaint with state hospital inspectors about the dangers posed by COMBINED COVID patients at Fountain Valley Regional Hospital in Orange County, a component of Tenet Health. were not evaluated for COVID-19 at the time of admission.
An auxiliary nurse spent two successive 12-hour shifts treating a patient in a general medicine field that required supervision. At the end of the shift, he said the patient had just tested positive for COVID.
The employee had only worn a surgical mask, not an N95 respirator or any form of eye protection, according to the complaint filed with the California Department of Public Health. The nursing assistant did not receive a COVID check or quarantine her until her next two shifts, according to the complaint.
The Department of Public Health said it could only comment on an ongoing inspection.
Barbara Lewis, director of the union’s Southern California hospital division, said COVID patients were on the same ground as cancer patients and post-surgical patients who sizing the aisles to speed up their recovery.
She said officials had taken steps to separate patients after the union organized a protest, spoke to local media, and complained to state fitness officials.
Hospital spokeswoman Jessica Chen said the hospital had “quickly implemented” state-run fitness adjustments and placed some COVID patients in the same nursing unit as patients without COVID. administered on the doctor’s orders, he added, and workers can access them in other parts of the community.
This contrasts, Lewis said, with high-profile examples of precautions that can be taken.
“Now we see what’s happening with baseball and basketball: they’re tested every day and treated with great caution,” Lewis said. “However, we have thousands and thousands of health workers going to paint in a very scary environment. “
Nursing faces sanctions
More than 40% of those who died from COVID-19 lived in retirement homes or service homes, according to investigators.
The patient mix was a scattered fear in nursing homes, which Medicare officials discovered when they tested infection practices at more than 15,000 facilities.
Reports highlighted the challenge at an Ohio nursing home and a Maryland home, where the state imposed a $70,000 fine for keeping inflamed patients away from those who were not yet sick.
The Fair Havens Center, a nursing home in Miami Springs, Florida, faced sanctions.
Florida regulators cut housing admissions and the Medicare government imposed a $235,000 civil fine, according to records.
The facility’s vice president of operations told inspectors that isolating exposed patients would mean isolating the entire facility: all people exposed to the 32 staff members who tested positive for the virus, according to the report.
Fair Havens Center responded to a request for feedback.
In Iowa, Medicare officials declared a state of “immediate danger” at the Pearl Valley Center for Care and Rehabilitation in Muscatine. There, they discovered that staff members were denying an epidemic between them, and a nursing director resurrected a network doctor. orders to pass or send citizens to the emergency room. Instead, officials found, last April, the assistant director of nursing kept COVID patients at the facility, and filed a general order from their medical director to send patients to the emergency room “if you can help. “
Meanwhile, it has been documented at the center that several patients had fever and declining oxygen levels, according to the Medicare inspection report. In less than two weeks, the center discovered an outbreak, with 61 citizens inflamed and nine dead, according to the report.
Medicare is investigating the Menlo Park Veterans Memorial House in New Jersey, Senator Joseph Vitale said at a recent legislative hearing. Resident Council Chairman Glenn Osborne said at the hearing that citizens of the home were sent back. to the same shared rooms after hospitalizations.
Osborne, an honorably liberated Marine, said he had noticed that more citizens in space died than other members of his army service. Veterans’ homes in Menlo Park and Paramus, where inspectors saw dementia patients with and without the virus combine in a day room. anyone reported more than 180 cases of COVID among citizens, 90 among staff and at least 60 deaths.
A spokesperson for the houses said they could comment due to an ongoing dispute.
“These deaths have occurred, ” said Osborne. ” Many of these deaths could surely be prevented, in my humble opinion. “
Federal social facilities and fitness officials called hospitals to let them know daily if they had a patient who arrived without COVID-19 but had an obvious or shown case of coronavirus 14 days later. The hospitals submitted 48,000 reports from 21 June to 28 August, this issue. reflects a double or additional count of individual patients.
COVID patients were combined with others for reasons; some hospitals report limited controls, so patients with the virus are only known after exposing others; in other cases, they had false negative control effects or their establishment rejected federal guidelines, which were not in force by law.
And while federal Medicare officials have inspected almost every single U. S. nursing home, it has inspected almost every senior residence in the U. S. and has been able to do so. But it’s not the first time In recent months and states have imposed fines and have been disposed of new admissions for periods of isolation, hospitals have been less monitored.
The Sutter scene
At Alta Bates in Oakland, a member of Sutter Health’s network, hospital staff made it transparent in official court cases before Cal/OSHA seeking directors to comply with exclusive state law on aerosol-borne diseases. looked for all the protections required through the state for a virus that has been shown to be transmitted through small components floating in the air.
Regulations require patients with a virus such as COVID-19 to be transferred to a specialized unit within five hours of their identity, or to a specialized facility. Regulations say those patients will have to be in a room with a HEPA certificate. with negative air pressure, which means that air circulates through a window or extraction fan instead of moving down the aisle.
Initially, in March, the hospital supplied a 40-bed COVID unit, according to Hill, but when a wave of patients did not materialize, this unit was reduced to 12 beds.
Since then, a steady flow of patients inflamed by the virus has been admitted, he said, many of whom underwent the test a few days after admission, and after being in normal rooms of the facility.
From March 10 to July 30, hill’s and others filed 8 court cases with Cal/OSHA, adding allegations that the hospital failed to comply with isolation regulations for COVID patients, some on the cancer floor.
So far, regulators have done little. Governor Gavin Newsom had ordered occupational protection officers to “focus on. . . “support for compliance “that in law enforcement, unless it was “the most serious violations. “
State officials responded to court cases through emails and “ensuring that appropriate virus prevention measures have been implemented,” according to Frank Polizzi, Cal/OSHA spokesman.
A third investigation involving transportation personnel who were not dressed in N95 respirators when moving patients with positive or imaginable COVID coronavirus to a Sutter facility near the hospital resulted in a $6750 fine, according to Cal/OSHA records.
The series of court cases also indicates that the hospital did not provide the mandatory non-public protective apparatus (PPE) under state law, an N95 respirator or something more protective, to care for patients inflamed with the virus.
Instead, Hill said, on floors with COVID, patients gained lower quality surgical masks, a fear reflected in court cases filed with Cal/OSHA.
Hill believes Paiste-Ponder and the nurse on his floor had the virus hit COVID patients who didn’t stay in their rooms.
“He’s unhappy because he didn’t want it to happen,” Hill said.
Polizzi said investigations into the July 17 death and some other hospitalization were ongoing.
A Sutter Health spokesman said the hospital takes the allegations seriously, adding Cal/OSHA complaints, and that its most sensible priority is to ensure safety and the patient.
The press release also states that “cohort,” or the practice of grouping patients inflamed by the virus, is a tool that “should be in a broader context, adding patient acuity, hospital census, and other environmental factors. “
Concerns in hospitals
CDC rules are not strict on the issue of COVID patient separation, noting that “institutions would possibly designate complete sets within the facility, with [staff] engaged” to treat COVID patients.
This technique has been a success at the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha. A recent study reported “extensive” viral contamination around COVID patients there, but noted that with “standard” infection techniques implemented, staff members who treated COVID patients did not. contract the virus.
The hospital installed an insulation unit with pumped air outside the aisles, limited access to the unit and trained to use well-developed protocols and N95 respirators, at a minimum. What worked in Nebraska, however, is far from the norm elsewhere. .
Cynthia Butler, a nurse and member of National Nurses United at Fawcett Memorial Hospital in Port Charlotte on Florida’s West Coast, said she felt safer running in the COVID unit, where she knew what she was dealing with and had a full PPE than on a general medical floor.
She believes she hit the virus on a patient who had COVID-19 but was housed on general ground in May. A similar scenario happened in July, when another patient had an unforeseen case of COVID, and Butler said she herself had other positives. Test.
She said patients did not meet the hospital’s criteria for evaluating admitted patients and that they left her on site, considerations she passed on to an OSHA inspector who contacted her about a complaint filed through her union about the facility.
“Every time I move on to paintings it’s like betting on Russian roulette,” Butler said.
A spokeswoman for HCA Healthcare, who owns the hospital, said she evaluates long-term care patients, who have surgery and those with viral symptoms, said staff have access to PPE and practice vigilant sanitation, universal masking, and social estating. .
However, butler is an option for Butler, who has stated that he cleans, feeds and begins administering patients intravenously and provides insurance when he moves away from their families.
“I give you the only word of convenience or type you can get,” said Butler, who has since taken an unscathed leave for security reasons. “I do that and I’m protected. “
Given studies showing that up to 45% of COVID patients are asymptomatic, UCSF Medical Center is all admitted individuals, said Dr. Robert Harrison, a professor at the University of California San Francisco School of Medicine, who consults on occupational fitness at the hospital. .
It is done to protect and reduce the spread within the hospital, he said. Those that test positive are separated into a single COVID unit.
And staff who have spent more than 15 minutes within 6 feet of an unidentified COVID patient with a less protective surgical mask are sent home for two weeks, he said.
Outside of university medicine, however, the front line turned to union leaders to push for such protections.
In Southern California, leaders of the National Union of Health Workers filed a formal complaint with state hospital inspectors about the dangers posed by COMBINED COVID patients at Fountain Valley Regional Hospital in Orange County, a member of Tenet Health’s for-profit organization. The complaint, patients were not evaluated for COVID-19 at the time of admission.
An auxiliary nurse spent two successive 12-hour shifts treating a patient in a general medicine field that required supervision. At the end of the shift, he said the patient had just tested positive for COVID.
The employee had only worn a surgical mask, not an N95 respirator or any form of eye protection, according to the complaint filed with the California. La Assistant Nurse’s Department of Public Health, was not subjected to COVID control or quarantined before her next two shifts. according to the complaint.
The Department of Public Health said it could simply comment on an ongoing inspection.
Barbara Lewis, director of the union’s Southern California hospital division, said COVID patients were at the same time as cancer patients and post-surgical patients who sizing the aisles to speed up their recovery.
She said officials took steps to separate patients after the union organized a protest, spoke to local media, and complained to state fitness officials.
Hospital spokeswoman Jessica Chen said the hospital had “quickly implemented” state-run fitness adjustments and placed some COVID patients in the same nursing unit as patients without COVID. administered on the doctor’s orders, he added, and workers can access them in other parts of the community.
This contrasts, Lewis said, with high-profile examples of precautions that can be taken.
“Now we see what happens to baseball and basketball: they are tested every day and treated with great caution,” Lewis said. “However, we have thousands and thousands of physical care staff who will paint in a very frightening environment. “
Nursing faces sanctions
More than 40% of those who died from COVID-19 lived in retirement homes or service homes, according to investigators.
The patient mix was a scattered fear in nursing homes, which Medicare officials discovered when they tested infection practices at more than 15,000 facilities.
Reports have highlighted the challenge at an Ohio nursing home and a Maryland home where the state imposed a $70,000 fine for not keeping inflamed patients away from those who were not in poor health, for now.
The Fair Havens Center, a nursing home in Miami Springs, Florida, faced sanctions.
Florida regulators cut housing admissions and the Medicare government imposed a $235,000 civil fine, according to records.
The facility’s vice president of operations told inspectors that isolating exposed patients would mean isolating the entire facility: all people exposed to the 32 staff members who tested positive for the virus, according to the report.
Fair Havens Center responded to a request for comment.
In Iowa, Medicare officials declared an “immediate danger” status at the Pearl Valley Care and Rehabilitation Center in Muscatine. There, they discovered that staff members denied an epidemic among themselves, and a nursing director resurrected a network doctor. orders to pass or send citizens to the emergency room. Instead, officials found, last April, the deputy director of nursing was keeping COVID patients at the facility, and presented a blanket order from his medical director to send patients to the emergency room “if you can help him. “
Meanwhile, it has been documented at the center that several patients had fever and declining oxygen levels, according to the Medicare inspection report. In less than two weeks, the center discovered an outbreak, with 61 citizens inflamed and nine dead, according to the report.
Medicare is investigating the Menlo Park Veterans Memorial House in New Jersey, Senator Joseph Vitale said at a recent legislative hearing. Resident Council President Glenn Osborne said at the hearing that the citizens of the house were sent back to the same dormitories after hospitalizations.
Osborne, a marine released with honor, said he had noticed that more citizens in space died than other members of his army service. Veterans’ homes in Menlo Park and Paramus, where inspectors saw dementia patients with and without the virus combine in a day room. anyone reported more than 180 cases of COVID among citizens, 90 among staff and at least 60 deaths.
A home spokesman said he could comment due to an ongoing dispute.
“These deaths have not occurred,” Osborne said. “Many of those deaths were surely preventable, in my humble opinion. “
We inspire organizations to republish our content free of charge. Here’s what we asked:
You must credit us as the original publisher, with a link to our site khn. org. If possible, include the original authors and “Kaiser Health News” in the signature. Please keep the links in the story.
It is vital to note that everything in khn. org cannot be republished. If a story is classified as “All Rights Reserved”, we cannot grant permission to republish that article.
Do you have any questions? Let us know KHNHelp@kff. org
Thank you for your interest in supporting Kaiser Health News (KHN), the country’s leading nonprofit fitness and fitness policyroom. We distribute our journalism without fees and advertising through media partners of all sizes and in communities large and small. all the bureaucracy of the engagement of our readers and listeners, and we appreciate your support.
KHN is an editorially independent program of KFF (Kaiser Family Foundation). You can KHN by making a contribution to KFF, a nonprofit that is not related to Kaiser Permanente.
Click the button below the KFF donations page that will provide more data and FAQs. Thank you!