Thursday Miscellany

Today the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services posted COVID-19 statistics from 88% of U.S. licensed nursing homes on its nursing home compare website. “These [nursing home] facilities reported over 95,000 confirmed COVID-19 cases and almost 32,000 deaths.” That is an extremely high case fatality rate and indeed the nursing home deaths represent roughly 30% of the total COVID-19 deaths in our country.

This statistic demonstrates the importance of not allowing people, particularly at risk people, to be placed in super spreader situations. The FEHBlog recalls from reading the Great Influenza book that the Spanish flu simply swept through crowded Army barracks and troopships in the fall of 1917 and 2018. The Wall Street Journal reports this evening that

The coronavirus pandemic dealt a crushing blow to nursing homes across the U.S., driving down their occupancy by nearly 100,000 residents between the end of 2019 and late May, according to new federal data. * * * The sharp decline in nursing home occupancy—about 10% of the nursing home population as of Dec. 31—reflects many factors including virus-related deaths, deaths from other causes and a steep drop in new admissions.

The silver lining in this particular COVID-19 cloud may be that the occupancy drop will allow the facilities to better socially distance the patients.

Healthcare Dive discusses how the complications associated with accepting federal grant money is discouraging “some” healthcare providers from accepting the grant money created by the CARES Act.

Of the five experts Healthcare Dive consulted, four said they had some provider clients opting to return the funds due to either a fear or unwillingness to accept the terms and conditions or worries over potential risks that come with accepting the money. “The lack of certainty has been a big pain point,” Mara McDermott, vice president of McDermott + Consulting told Healthcare Dive.

Perhaps a chunk of these opt-out provider pivoted to the Payroll Protection Program or one of the other general CARES Act offerings to small businesses.

Reuters reports that the Trump Administration “

has selected five companies, including Moderna Inc, AstraZeneca Plc and Pfizer Inc, as the most likely candidates to produce a vaccine for the novel coronavirus, the New York Times reported on Wednesday, citing senior officials. The other companies are Johnson & Johnson and Merck & Co Inc, according to the paper here The selected companies will get access to additional government funds, help in running clinical trials, and financial and logistical support, the paper reported.

The official White House announcement is expected later this month. The Wall Street Journal adds that

The U.S. government has reached a $1.2 billion deal with AstraZeneca to secure the supply of a potential coronavirus vaccine that could be ready as early as October. The government will bankroll a 30,000-person vaccine trial in the U.S. starting in the summer, plus the ramp-up of manufacturing capacity to make at least 300 million doses.