In this week’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, researchers review COVID-19 activity and vaccination in US nursing homes from October 2023 through February 2024 and find up to 26% of nursing homes reported at least one case of COVID-19 during each week of the study period.
The study was based on information gathered as part of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) National Healthcare Safety Network.
Weekly rates of incident SARS-CoV-2 infection ranged from 61.4 per 10,000 nursing home residents during the week ending February 11, 2024, to 133.8 per 10,000 during the week ending December 3, 2023. The cumulative weekly SARS-CoV-2 infection rate was highest in the Midwest region (130.1 per 10,000 residents) and lowest in the South (93.1 per 10,000).
The same geographic pattern was seen among COVID hospitalizations: The cumulative weekly COVID-19–associated hospitalization rate was 5.8 per 10,000 residents and was highest in the Midwest (6.7 per 10,000) and lowest in the South (5.0 per 10,000), the authors said.
CDC recommends updated vaccines to older Americans
Nursing homes were the first epicenters of the pandemic in the United States in 2020, as those 85 years and older are the most likely to die from infections with the novel coronavirus. Despite the risk of severe infection from COVID-19, the study authors found that only 40.5% of residents were up to date with COVID vaccination by the end of the study period. Residents in the South had the lowest rate (32.4%), compared to residents in the Northeast, who had the highest (47.3%).
"This finding indicates that an important prevention tool is being underutilized in this population," the authors concluded.
This finding indicates that an important prevention tool is being underutilized in this population.
In February, the CDC recommended that all adults aged older than 65 years receive one additional dose of an updated 2023–2024 COVID-19 vaccine at least 4 months after the previous updated dose.