A from a federal agency has reported the first COVID-19 related death has occurred in a Hawaii nursing home, but state officials say it was a suspect case that turned out to not be related to the coronavirus.
Local officials at the Hawaii Department of Health maintain no COVID-19 deaths have occurred in nursing facilities in Hawaii to date.
“DOH can confirm this is an error,” DOH spokeswoman Janice Okubo said Friday.
The reported death was at Hale Makua, a Maui nursing home, according to the federal report.
Hale Makua Health Services Executive Director Wesley Lo said Friday that the death listing is for a patient who had COVID-19-like symptoms. The patient began showing symptoms similar to coronavirus symptoms on May 2, but died before the negative test results returned. As a result, CMS lists it as a suspect COVID-19 death.
“The resident was on hospice services for two months so her decline was expected,” said Teana Kaho鈥榦hanohano, Hale Makua Health Services administrator.
The Hawaii Department of Health does not provide data about suspect or confirmed cases in nursing home facilities. So the new federal tracker provides more detail about how COVID-19 has affected patients and staffing at the facilities that care for people who are most vulnerable to the disease. But CMS only required cases dating back to May 1 to be reported.
As a result, the is incomplete, and some COVID-19 cases confirmed by states that dealt with large outbreaks are not included, the . That’s because CMS made it optional for facilities to report cases dating back to January.
Nationally, nursing and elderly care facilities have represented a large proportion of COVID-19 clusters and deaths, as the disease afflicts many elderly people. About 40% of COVID-19 deaths in the U.S. have
Hale Makua Health Services, which operates two elderly care facilities on Maui, continues to care for the state’s only COVID-19 patient verified in a nursing home. The man is recovering, according to Hale Makua administrators. That man’s case is not yet included in this federal dataset, either, because its most recent data submission to CMS has not yet been included in the federal data.
Kula Hospital is listed to have had 30 suspect COVID-19 cases, but none of them have resulted in COVID-19 diagnoses, according to CMS.
Nursing homes also responded to questions from CMS about staffing shortages, ventilators and inventory of supplies such as gowns, gloves, masks and even hand sanitizer. Most facilities reported having sufficient supplies. Some cited shortages of staff.
Kuakini Geriatric Care cited a shortage of nursing staff. Facilities such as the Care Center of Honolulu and Palolo Chinese Home reported a shortage of aides.
Going forward, facilities will be required to provide a weekly report to CMS about suspected and confirmed COVID-19 cases in their facilities. The went into effect on May 6.
Sign up for our FREE morning newsletter and face each day more informed.
Support Independent, Unbiased News
Civil Beat is a nonprofit, reader-supported newsroom based in 贬补飞补颈驶颈. When you give, your donation is combined with gifts from thousands of your fellow readers, and together you help power the strongest team of investigative journalists in the state.
About the Author
-
Eleni Avenda帽o, who covers public health issues, is a corps member with , a national nonprofit organization that places journalists in local newsrooms. Her health care coverage is also supported by , , and . You can reach her by email at egill@civilbeat.org or follow her on Twitter at .