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Holocaust survivor Edith Frankie became one of the Los Angeles Jewish Home’s first residents to be vaccinated for COVID-19 on Dec. 30, 2020. (Photo courtesy Los Angeles Jewish Home) For much of ...
Nursing homes and long-term care facilities that have experienced an unusual number of deaths resulting from COVID-19 should expect multiple administrative inspections and investigations.
COVID-19 has become a nightmare for nursing homes and other senior living facilities, as well as their staffs, residents, and families. Newsletters Games Share a News Tip Featured ...
High Staff Turnover at U.S. Nursing Homes Poses Risks for Residents’ Care A new study highlights the persistent problems caused by an unstable work force, an underlying threat that may have led ...
Biden’s nursing homes proposal ignores COVID risks and increases costs by Mark J. Warshawsky, opinion contributor - 03/30/22 3:01 PM ET ...
COVID-19 vaccines have allowed nursing homes in the U.S. to make dramatic progress since the dark days of the pandemic, but senior care facilities are still experiencing scattered outbreaks that ...
The Menlo Park and Paramus veterans homes — where inspectors saw dementia patients with and without the virus commingling in a day room — both reported more than 180 COVID cases among ...
Nursing homes, long in the spotlight as a key battleground in the fight to prevent the spread of COVID-19, are making key structural changes to prepare for an expected third surge of the disease.
Long-term care homes reported more than 700 COVID-19 deaths in January, the highest one-month total. The number of residents reported as testing positive last month set records, too.
For much of last year, the Los Angeles Jewish Home had relatively few COVID-19 cases, evading the pandemic’s hefty toll on long-term care residents in Southern California.
For much of last year, the Los Angeles Jewish Home had relatively few COVID-19 cases, evading the pandemic’s hefty toll on long-term care residents in Southern California.