Chapter Contents
Rural Issues
Affordable Housing
Hospice and Palliative Care
Home and Community-Based Services
Home Health
Adult Day Services and PACE
Skilled Nursing
Assisted Living
Life Plan Communities
Provider-Specific Reopening Guidance
By intent, the vast majority of this Pandemic Playbook addresses topics that are of interest and applicable to providers of long-term services and supports across all types and locations. The topics, issues, and lessons learned may be of value to a range of providers from home-based caregivers to hospital-based systems of health care.
Based on the guidance of our expert panelists, we have incorporated a complete chapter on provider-specific resources. Regulatory mandates and state-specific executive orders are ever-changing, so some of these resources will require periodic updating; however, these initial resources establish a baseline for reference.
Provider types covered in this chapter include, but are not limited to, adult day, affordable housing, assisted living, community services, home care, hospice, life plan communities, PACE, and skilled nursing. The resources are further organized into sub-categories of pandemic response for the ease of content navigation. There is also a section of this chapter dedicated to the unique challenges faced by rural providers of care and services.
It is well-known that rural health care providers face an array of unique challenges in serving their communities effectively and efficiently. Response to a pandemic adds a layer of hardship and complexity that is easily overwhelming.
Rural Issues
According to an Aug. 3, 2020, update from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), roughly 46 million Americans live in rural areas. Specifically, this CDC update cites the following common health and social inequities that place rural residents at a higher risk of serious illness and pandemic susceptibility: higher rates of cigarette smoking, high blood pressure, obesity, less access to health care, and less likelihood of having health insurance.
It is well-known that rural health care providers face an array of unique challenges in serving their communities effectively and efficiently. Response to a pandemic adds a layer of hardship and complexity that is easily overwhelming. The following resources specifically address rural providers’ pandemic-related issues, needs, and lessons learned.
Rural Member Challenges
- Availability of testing and retesting: Local health departments and hospitals do not have enough tests available, and older adult service providers have a difficult time having staff tested unless they have 2 definitive symptoms. It is especially difficult to access rapid testing in rural areas. Providers wait for a week or more for testing and test results. This is an ever-changing variable.
- Staff shortage: When staff resign or express a fear of working amid positive cases, there is nowhere to look for replacements. There simply are not enough bodies in rural areas to fill the volume of frontline positions that are open.
- Financial solvency: Because of the uncertainty of a pandemic’s duration, rural providers have the potential to lose significant revenue quickly through reduced occupancy.
- Technology: Rural communities frequently experience a digital gap in Internet accessibility and reliability that also affects availability of telehealth options.
- Emergency staffing options: If a significant outbreak occurs or if staff tests positive or must quarantine, rural communities will have few, if any, options for temporary, supplemental agency staffing. CDC guidelines may evolve over time to allow flexibility among asymptomatic staff; however, this cannot be assumed.
Crisis Preparedness and Pandemic Needs
- Infection control: Rural providers may lack space that can be dedicated for isolation, supplemented by a substantial amount of PPE. All but one rural community respondent had positive resident and staff cases.
- Relationships with local hospitals: Local, critical-access hospital relationships can be strained when hospitals do not fully understand why isolation units are established in long-term care.
- Relationships with vendors: Stand-alone care providers may lack relationships with national vendors; however, partnerships with existing service management companies (e.g., dining services) can enable these providers to access otherwise unattainable supplies. Value First vendors continuously update available resources, so rural members may consider this alternative for supply acquisition.
- Community relationships: One rural member noted that the PPE supplies provided through its area emergency management group became a lifeline. However, the pick-up location was 90 minutes away, causing a different layer of challenge.
- Local support: Local health departments need to be prepared. A lack of such preparedness directly impacts all providers in a county through ambiguous and sometimes conflicting guidance, as well as an extremely ineffective testing system.
- Networking: A rural LeadingAge member suggests that LeadingAge and its state partners, CMS, state agencies, local health departments, hospitals, and nursing homes meet at least once per week to share available changes and updates.
- Technology: Tablets enable residents to communicate with friends and family, and enable provider leadership to communicate with resident and family members via email. In concert with Zoom or other teleconference platforms, these can also be utilized for medical provider appointments.
- Resources: Rural providers need templates for emergency plans and for communicating with individual stakeholder groups, in addition to resources for replacement staffing.
Additional Resources
- Resources from Rural Health Information Hub
- S. Rural Areas See an Increase in the Pandemic (WebMD)
- Rural–Urban Mental Health Disparities in the United States During COVID-19 (American Psychological Assn.)
- Helping America’s “Forgotten Places” Amid a Pandemic (PhilanthropywoRx)
- Promoting Quality of Life Among Rural Older Adults (LeadingAge LTSS Center @ UMass Boston): “When my colleagues in Maine asked me to offer guidance on how they might re-imagine residential care in the Pine Tree State, my first instinct was to broaden the discussion. Rather than focusing on building residential care settings to meet the needs of older Mainers, I suggested that policymakers consider the myriad ways in which the homes of older Mainers, however older adults define home, might find their rightful place on a true continuum of residential care options.”
- Study Examines Telehealth, Rural Disparities in Pandemic (AAFP)
- The Pandemic is Worsening Some Inequities for Rural Women (Public Health Newswire)
- Tribal Communities Plan, Prepare and Respond (CDC)
- Washington State University Scientists Develop Pandemic Tracking Tool for Rural Areas (WSU Insider)
- Pandemic Threatens to Take Crushing Toll on Rural Areas, Data Show (Stat News)
- Rural Housing issues Resident Rent FAQ (LeadingAge)
- Rural Housing to Launch Service Coordination in Senior, Disabled Communities (LeadingAge)
- USDA Rural Housing on Income Changes, Wait List Management (LeadingAge)
- Rural communities find workarounds to vaccinate residents and staff (McKnight’s Senior Living): Rural areas, with their smaller populations and tight-knit communities, are devising workarounds to vaccinate residents of long-term care facilities not yet reached by the federal vaccination program.
Rural Lessons Learned
In the midst of an emergency as impactful as a pandemic, we must often act first and reflect later. It’s common for leaders to ask themselves retrospective questions, such as:
- Did I act too quickly or too slowly?
- What could I have done differently?
- Did my approach of choice work as well as I anticipated it would?
- How can I improve my responses if a pandemic recurs?
And then, of course, there are a lengthy series of “What ifs” that we ponder.
LeadingAge has received numerous “lessons learned” tips from members during the COVID-19 pandemic, which we are sharing at the conclusion of each related Playbook Section. In addition, a compilation of shared Lessons Learned may be referenced in the Playbook Appendix.
“We were as well prepared as we could have been based on what we knew. We followed all the recommendations and diligently conducted employee and resident screenings. We completed a series of tabletop exercises and conducted weekly in-services [and] education. We performed infection control competencies and randomly conducted infection control surveillance for staff members. We adopted COVID-specific policies and procedures.
“You can get hit very hard, very fast, and you have to make decisions quickly. We lost 45 of 83 employees over 3 days due to testing positive, contact tracing, or they were fearful and just quit. Every single department manager except dietary was out, including the MDS nurse, the assessment nurse, and the director of nursing. None of the employees had symptoms prior to baseline testing and more than 90% of them never had any symptoms after testing positive. We did everything correctly and diligently to try to keep COVID out of our facility, but COVID found its way in anyway. Access to PPE is in limited supply. The financial impact is going to hurt LTSS providers in the present and future.”
– Billy Johnson, campus director, Baptist Village of Hugo, Hugo, OK
More lessons learned:
- Impact of the digital divide in the age of COVID-19 (Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association)
- Pandemic Exacerbates Rural EMS Struggles (Grand Forks Herald)
- Village Versus Virus: Rural Ethos Protects Where Public Health Fails (Health Affairs)
- Rural America is More Vulnerable to Pandemic Than Cities Are, and It’s Starting to Show (The Conversation)
- Audio Interview: June 8, 2020: Jess Maurer of Maine Council on Aging on COVID in a Rural State With an Aged Population
- Audio Interview: July 30, 2020: Shelly Griffith of Eben Ezer Lutheran Care Center on the Pandemic, PPE, and Community Support in a Rural County
Affordable Housing
In a pandemic, affordable housing providers face the unique challenges of navigating HUD and CDC guidelines for resident safety and infection control with a very limited staffing model and tight budgets. Pressing needs for funding, meal service coordination, resident education and communication, cleaning and disinfecting properties, and other issues must be carefully managed and balanced.
- Lifeline 101: A Joint Presentation by HUD and the FCC (July 7 webinar recording; scroll down)
- HUD Multifamily Tenant COVID-19 Brochures:
- HUD: Food Resources for Residents of Multifamily Properties
- Senior housing facing increasing wage pressures and resorting to more rent concessions (NIC): Higher staff wages for some senior housing operators likely are putting a strain on net operating income, according to data collected from the most recent executive survey conducted by the National Investment Center for Seniors Housing & Care.
- “The State of the Nation’s Housing 2020” (Joint Center for Housing Studies of Harvard University): Pandemic causes “economic disruption” for low-income, older-adult households: study.
- HUD reopens COVID-19 relief applications for affordable senior housing providers (McKnight’s Senior Living): The federal government announced a second application period for COVID-19 supplemental payments for housing providers.
LeadingAge resources:
- HUD leadership says “safety first” for physical inspections
- HUD announces Service Coordinator CARES Act allocation (updated)
- HUD releases plan to resume “light touch” MORs
- HUD grants vacancy claims flexibility for COVID-19
- House Appropriators: New Section 202 Homes Needed
- HUD issues evictions guidance, housing stability brochure
- New HUD Report: Increase of Older Adult Housing Needs
- HUD Proposes New RAD for PRAC Forms, Provides RAD Updates
- Diagnostic Testing Support for Affordable Housing Communities
- Reopening Considerations for Affordable Housing Providers (QuickCast)
- Medical Experts Discuss Infection Control Practices for Senior Housing
- HUD, CDC Prepare for Pandemic Hurricane Season
- HUD Recommendations: Cleaning and Disinfecting
- HUD Guidance Allows Electronic Signatures and Documents
- HUD Multifamily Guidance on Electronic Signature, Transmission and Storage
- Recovery Considerations for Affordable Housing Providers
- One Stop Federal Site on Eviction and Mortgage Protections
- Next Steps: “Reopening” Considerations for Housing Providers
- Housing Highlights from HEROES Act Relief Bill
- Housing Proposals for COVID Relief Come Into Focus
- Recovery Tools for Affordable Housing Operations
- HUD updates FAQs on vacant units and project funds
- Affordable Housing – Resident Resources during COVID-19
- Housing Provider Shares Plans, Continues Lease-Ups
- Template Letter Regarding Foreclosure Relief
- Sample Guidance, Policies, and Flyers for Affordable Housing
- Special Visitor Guidance for Affordable Housing
- Affordable Housing Providers and the Coronavirus
- Pandemic’s Impact on Affordable Housing for Seniors (Informal LeadingAge member survey): Results reveal COVID-19 cases in majority of communities; financial strain and isolation emerge as key concerns.
- LeadingAge Survey: Social Isolation a Top Challenge in Affordable Senior Housing: Survey finds 84% of providers chose social isolation as their top challenge, yet in-unit internet access lags.
- Audio interviews on housing topics:
- April 2, 2020: Dennis Adams of Christopher Homes on serving low-income housing residents and protecting staff
- April 7, 2020: David Smart of Eaton Senior Communities on how COVID-19 Affects Older Adult Housing, Plus Supporting Staff
- May 27, 2020: Lee Ann Hubanks of Plano Community Home on Challenges Facing Her Affordable Housing Organization
- June 26, 2020: Mary Stompe of PEP Housing on Keeping Housing Residents Engaged While Preparing for Reopening and Another Surge
Ensuring that hospice and palliative care professionals are able to maintain contact with and access to clients must be a priority. Grief support for all those experiencing loss can be offered by a hospice provider and give much-needed resources to community members.
Hospice and Palliative Care
An essential care and support service in any circumstance, hospice and palliative care can be even more vitally important in the event of a pandemic. Ensuring that hospice and palliative care professionals are able to maintain contact with and access to clients must be a priority. Grief support for all those experiencing loss can be offered by a hospice provider and give much-needed resources to community members.
- Hospice Guidance (Center to Advance Palliative Care)
- Symptoms Management for COVID-19 (Center to Advance Palliative Care)
- Palliative Care Team Resources (Center to Advance Palliative Care)
- Telehealth Coverage Policies in the Time of COVID-19 to Date (Ctr. for Connected Health Policy)
LeadingAge resources:
- New CMS FAQs Include Guidance on Hospice Staff Access
- 5/13/2020 update: Hospice Blanket Waivers Chart.
- COVID-19 Telehealth Service Changes
- 5/1/2020 update: Hospice Blanket Waivers Chart
- HUD May 4 Presentation: Cleaning and Disinfecting of Indoor Spaces
- Serious Illness Communications, Grief, and Advanced Care Planning Resources (updated)
- FCC’s Telehealth COVID-19 Funds
- Hospice, Hospice Partners, and Telehealth in the Time of COVID-19
- Hospice Stakeholder Letter for COVID-19 Package 4, April 3
- Joint Recommendations from National Hospice Groups Regarding COVID-19 Relief
- Hospice Requests for Regulatory and Statutory Change (LeadingAge/VNAA)
- Special Visitor and Infection Control Guidance for Hospice
- Audio interviews on hospice and palliative care topics:
- May 13, 2020: Karen Hatfield of Hospice of the Western Reserve on Hospice Services, Grief, and Help for Mental Health
- June 23, 2020: Michael Soccio of Trinity Health At Home on the Economics and Benefits of a Large Home Care/Hospice Program
- July 20, 2020: Lisa Balster of Hospice of Dayton on Grief, Hospice in a Pandemic, and Ways Hospice Can Help Staff and Other Providers
Home and Community-Based Services
Home and community-based services (HCBS) can be a lifeline for older adults living in community during a pandemic. Caregivers with dependent family members will need additional support in caring for their loved ones, and working together with other aging services providers, legislators, and regulators can be key to ensuring some of the HCBS remain available.
- Emergency Preparedness: Caring for Persons Living with Dementia in a Long-term or Community-based Setting (Alzheimer’s Assn.)
- New CMS COVID-19 Resources for State Agencies on Medicaid HCBS (LeadingAge)
- Heroes Act Highlights for Medicaid and Home and Community-Based Services (LeadingAge)
- CMS Extends Deadlines for HCBS Settings Rule (LeadingAge)
- Audio interviews on home and community-based services topics:
- April 18, 2020: Nesa Joseph of Visiting Nurse Association of Greater St. Louis on How Hospice and Other Community-Based Services Have Adjusted to COVID-19
- May 6, 2020: Andrea Lazarek-LaQuay of Nascentia Health on Helping Counties “Find the Virus
- May 8, 2020: Deborah Royster of Seabury Resources for Aging on Reconfiguring Services for Community-Based Customers
- June 23, 2020: Michael Soccio of Trinity Health At Home on the Economics and Benefits of a Large Home Care/Hospice Program
- July 15, 2020: Marki Flannery of VNSNY on HCBS Services Hit Hard by COVID in NYC
- July 16, 2020: Dorothy Davis of VNHS on PPE, Testing, Telehealth Issues in HCBS
LeadingAge LTSS Center @UMass Boston research reports:
- How the Coronavirus Could Change Home Health Care
- Protecting Home Care Aides During the Pandemic
- COVID-19 is Disrupting Services for Older Adults Living in Community
- How Senior Centers in Massachusetts are Navigating the Pandemic
Home Health
Successful recovery at home—whether in the community or in a retirement setting—may be heavily dependent on home health providers, especially during a pandemic. Maintaining access to critical therapies, medical oversight, and a visiting nurse is fundamental to the healing process for older adults, and a pandemic may make it immensely challenging to continue services. Home health providers need support and guidance from public health authorities and state and federal regulatory agencies to deliver services safely and reliably for both clients and employees.
- Home Health Guidance (Center to Advance Palliative Care)
- Home Health Blanket Waivers Chart (updated May 1, 2020; LeadingAge/VNAA)
- Home Health Blanket Waivers Chart (updated May 13, 2020; LeadingAge/VNAA)
- Home Health Requests for Regulatory and Statutory Change (LeadingAge/VNAA)
- Home Health Infection Control Guidance (LeadingAge/VNAA)
- Template Letter for Visitors to Patients Receiving Home Health Services (LeadingAge/VNAA)
- How the Coronavirus Could Change Home Health Care (LTSS Center research report)
- COVID-19 Propels Innovations for Care at Home (CLA): Hospital at home models help persons receive care at home and limits their exposure to other illnesses, all while freeing up hospital space for acutely ill patients.
In a pandemic, adult day and PACE programs may be some of the first to discontinue services to older adults, depending on the method and intensity of the disease’s spread. The absence of these essential services may create a great strain on the families and caregivers that are dependent on their day-to-day operations.
Adult Day Services and PACE
In a pandemic, adult day and PACE programs may be some of the first to discontinue services to older adults, depending on the method and intensity of the disease’s spread. The absence of these essential services may create a great strain on the families and caregivers that are dependent on their day-to-day operations. Maintaining robust and frequent dialog with all persons-served, families, and with state and federal regulators can foster crucial understanding of needs and hopefully hasten the resumption of services, albeit perhaps in an alternative form.
LeadingAge resources:
- CMS Extends Deadlines for HCBS Settings Rule
- CMS Documents Provide New COVID-19 Guidance to PACE Organizations
- States Take Action to Sustain Adult Day Services
- CARES Act Expands Federal Small Business Loans, Can Support Aging Services
- What’s in the CARES Act for LeadingAge Members?
- Adult Day Stakeholder Letter for COVID-19 Package 4, April 3 (LeadingAge/NADSA)
- Member Ideas and Inspiration: PACE Remains Open Through Coronavirus Crisis
- Member Ideas and Inspiration: PACE Provider Adapts to Lockdowns With “Hopemobiles”
- CMS Issues COVID-19 Guidance for PACE Organizations
- Audio interview July 9, 2020: Rola O’Meally of St. Ann’s Community on Shutting Down—and Then Reinventing—Adult Day Programs
Skilled Nursing
Already the most highly regulated area of aging services, skilled nursing providers will face a multitude of challenges on all fronts in the event of a pandemic. Staying on-pace with rapidly changing guidance and regulations, keeping residents safe and protected, implementing intensified infection control measures, training and retaining staff, managing staff shortages, and balancing the social needs of families and residents will be just a few of the core competences that nursing home leaders must practice. Working closely with, and providing a steady stream of information to, legislators and regulators as well as the press can make an immense difference in the success of a SNF’s pandemic mitigation.
LeadingAge LTSS Center @UMass Boston research reports:
- Solving the Nursing Home Crisis after COVID-19
- The Importance of Long-Term Care Populations in COVID-19 Models
- Will the Pandemic Lead to Long-Term Care Reforms?
- Survey: How Is Senior Living Coping With the Pandemic?
- Post-Acute Care: Preparing for COVID-19
- Guiding Nursing Homes Through a Hard Reality
- Protecting Home Care Aides During the Pandemic
- COVID-19 Is Disrupting Services for Older Adults Living in Community
- COVID-19 Guidelines for Long-Term Care Settings
- Reimagining Nursing Homes in the Wake of COVID-19
- Stemming the Tide of COVID‐19 Infections in Massachusetts Nursing Homes
LeadingAge resources:
- CMS Issues Visitation FAQs for Nursing Home Providers (LeadingAge)
- “Reopening” to Visitors: A Review of CMS and States’ Guidance to Nursing Homes (LeadingAge)
- NHSN Reporting Issues Cheat Sheet (LeadingAge)
- CMS Releases Infection Control and COVID-19 Data (LeadingAge)
- CMS Outlines Key Activities of Nursing Home Reopening (LeadingAge)
- CMS Releases Phased Reopening Guidance for Nursing Homes (LeadingAge)
- CMS Announces Additional Blanket Waivers for Nursing Homes (LeadingAge)
- Nursing Home Blanket Waivers Chart (LeadingAge, revised)
- COVID-19 Focused Survey Tool and Checklist (LeadingAge)
- Reopening Considerations for Nursing Homes (QuickCast)
- Audio interview: Oct. 28, 2020: Jerry Nevins of Rose Blumkin Jewish Home on Working With Surveyors
- Audio interview: Oct. 12, 2020: Cathy Neece-Brown of J.L. West Ctr for Dementia Care on Protecting Residents Living With Dementia
Other resources:
- Coronavirus Commission for Safety and Quality in Nursing Homes (Commission Final Report)
- COVID-19 Vaccination Program Interim Playbook for Jurisdiction Operations (CDC Report)
- From the Factory to the Frontlines: The Operation Warp Speed Strategy for Distributing a COVID-19 Vaccine (U.S. Department of Health and Human Services)
- Senior Living Nursing Facilities: Preparing for COVID-19 Positive Residents (SFCS Architects White Paper)
- If Nursing Homes Can’t Embrace Change Post-COVID, “Shame on Us” (Skilled Nursing News)
- Guidance for Long Term Care (Center to Advance Palliative Care)
- CMS Long-Term Care Facility Guidance
- Preparing Nursing Homes and Assisted Living Facilities for COVID-19 (CDC recorded webinar)
- Emergency Preparedness: Caring for Persons Living with Dementia in a Long-term or Community-based Setting (Alzheimer’s Assn.)
- CMS Accelerated and Advance Payments Fact Sheet
- CMS Telehealth Toolkit for Nursing Homes
- COVID-19 and Nursing Homes: What Went Wrong and Next Steps (Senate Finance Committee)
- Skilled nursing occupancy hits new low of 73.8% (NIC): The trend of declining occupancy rates for skilled nursing continued in August as a result of the ongoing effects of COVID-19.
- AHRQ ECHO National Nursing Home COVID-19 Action Network: Project ECHO, in partnership with the federal Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) and the Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI), is launching a new, virtual peer learning community to help nursing homes with COVID-19 preparedness, safety, and infection control.
- 35th SNF Cost Comparison and Industry Trends Report: Execute on the Fundamentals (CLA): For SNF operators, a thorough review of national operating and financial metrics [to] help you determine how a facility is performing overall. Includes information on prevailing trends and the fundamentals of SNF finance and operations.
- Skilled care M&A market now one of best on record: ESI (McKnight’s Senior Living, 11/4/2020): One real estate brokerage firm says the SNF merger and acquisition market is stronger than ever right now.
- COVID Impacts And Focus: The Emerging Landscape (PharMerica webinar): Part 1 of a series examining the immediate impacts and learnings from the COVID-19 pandemic, in the context of regulatory and industry trends already transforming skilled nursing. Speakers address impacts of COVID on SNFs overall, accelerated downsizing in the industry, calls for faster shifts to risk, a looming customer deficit, and irrelevancy for those that cannot adapt quickly.
- COVID Impacts And Focus: Clinical Imperatives Moving Forward (PharMerica webinar): Part 2 of a webinar series. Speakers will address impacts of COVID on SNFs overall, accelerated downsizing in the industry, calls for faster shifts to risk, a looming customer deficit, and irrelevancy for those that cannot adapt quickly.
- What Happens Next: Regulatory And Policy Outlook For The Pandemic (PharMerica webinar): This webinar examines the immediate impacts and learnings from the COVID-19 pandemic; in particular, reflecting on COVID-19’s impact on nursing homes and the actions of the government and industry leaders as a result.
- Time to rethink U.S. nursing home landscape (McKnight’s Senior Living): Facilities that serve single types of skilled nursing patients—and a payment system that differentiates and reimburses accordingly—would improve care for seniors and benefit providers, according to a preeminent long-term care researcher.
- Skilled nursing census-drivers found, but integration more critical than ever due to COVID (McKnight’s Senior Living): While specialty programs have a long history in skilled nursing, the latest iterations depend largely on bringing advanced practice clinicians and hospital staff into buildings and implementing technology that drives outcomes—while making results easily reportable.
- OIG eyes COVID-19 reporting requirements for nursing homes (McKnight’s Senior Living): More scrutiny will soon be placed on the federal government’s COVID-19 reporting requirements for providers and how they’re handled. The Office of Inspector General ratcheted up pressure on 10/19/21, when it announced plans to evaluate officials’ handling of the regulation.
- Pandemic has intensified shift away from SNFs as post-acute care destinations (McKnight’s Senior Living): The pandemic has hastened a decline in post-acute discharges to skilled nursing facilities, a new study of commercially insured patients has found.
Assisted Living
Although not as highly regulated as skilled nursing facilities, assisted living communities face nearly the same challenges in a pandemic. Issues include keeping up with rapidly changing guidance (if issued by the state), working to protect residents while honoring the socialization needs of being with family, intensifying infection control, maintaining open lines of communication with all stakeholders, and managing myriad workforce issues. The challenge for assisted living communities is to divine from limited federal guidance, and in some cases limited state guidance, a clear path forward for daily operations.
- Preparing Nursing Homes and Assisted Living Facilities for COVID-19 (CDC recorded webinar)
- “Reopening” to Visitors: A Review of CMS and States’ Guidance to Nursing Homes (LeadingAge)
- COVID-19: How Should Assisted Living Providers Monitor or Limit Visitors? (LeadingAge)
- Assisted living providers must prepare for ‘inevitable’ COVID-19 negligence suits (McKnight’s Senior Living)
- Assisted living operators must implement plans to prevent social isolation under new law (McKnight’s): A bill requiring long-term care facilities, including assisted living communities, to prevent social isolation in residents was signed into law on 10/23/20 in New Jersey.
- Argentum releases infection control program guidance for assisted living providers (McKnight’s Senior Living): Responding to a worsening pandemic, Argentum assembled a working group of clinical experts to address key COVID-related challenges to help guide AL members.
- CDC quantifies coronavirus’s heavy toll on assisted living (McKnight’s Senior Living): The pandemic has taken a heavy toll on the assisted living industry, according to a new analysis of state and local data published by CDC.
- Assisted living community opens COVID-19 recovery unit for older adults (Las Cruces Sun News): A New Mexico assisted living and memory care community has opened a COVID-19 unit to offer older adults a place to recover from the virus outside of a hospital setting.
- Bipartisan working group to suggest assisted living changes in wake of pandemic (McKnight’s Senior Living): Connecticut is launching a working group to evaluate and address challenges resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic and to make recommendations on changes needed in assisted living communities and skilled nursing facilities.
- Genworth’s Cost of Care Survey: The COVID-19 pandemic contributed to substantial eldercare cost hikes, especially for assisted living and in-home care, according to the results of Genworth’s 2020 Cost of Care Survey.
- Pandemic may put 56 percent of assisted living operators out of business in a year: survey (McKnight’s Senior Living): Fifty-six percent of assisted living operators don’t believe they will be in business in a year, due to increased COVID-related costs, according to the survey.
- WHO issues new infection prevention, control guidance for assisted living operators facing SARS-CoV-2: Early detection, education and training, as well as consistent implementation of infection prevention and control policies are necessary to protect the mental and physical health of residents and staff members of assisted living communities and other long-term care and congregate living settings, according to updated guidance by the World Health Organization.
- Assisted living’s ‘unique challenges’ warrant special attention in pandemic, emergency response plans (research letter from JAMA Network): “Estimation of Excess Mortality Rates Among US Assisted Living Residents During the COVID-19 Pandemic” is the first national study of COVID-19-related mortality in U.S. assisted living communities shows a “crucial need” for specific attention to such residences in pandemic and other emergency responses.
- COVID-19 in assisted living communities: Neighborhood deprivation and state social distancing policies matter (Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology): Assisted living communities (ALCs) with higher proportions of dual-eligible minority residents were more likely to have COVID-19 outbreaks within their communities. ALCs located in more socioeconomically deprived neighborhoods, and in states with less stringent state social distancing policies, tended to have more COVID-19 cases.
- Infection control was difficult for assisted living providers during pandemic (Journal of the American Geriatrics Society): A study looking at dementia-relevant COVID-19 infection control in 119 AL communities found that most administrators faced challenges involving indoor common areas, group activities, and maintaining mask use among residents with dementia.
Life plan communities […] may find themselves balancing the regulatory challenges of skilled nursing, the potential void of guidance for assisted living, and the interpretative adaptations needed of [HCBS] and hospice. In addition, LPCs must determine how to handle safety, movement, and autonomy of a large independent living population that may or may not comply with community infection control measures.
Life Plan Communities
Housing many aging services provider types within one dynamic umbrella, life plan communities/continuing care retirement communities (LPCs or CCRCs) may find themselves balancing the regulatory challenges of skilled nursing, the potential void of guidance for assisted living, and the interpretative adaptations needed of home and community based services and hospice. In addition, LPCs must determine how to handle safety, movement, and autonomy of a large independent living population that may or may not comply with community infection control measures. As with all providers, LPCs will face a difficult financial balancing act to ensure much-needed supplies, staff, and equipment are available for an indeterminate duration.
- Preparing Nursing Homes and Assisted Living Facilities for COVID-19 (CDC recorded webinar)
- COVID-19 sentiment report: A survey of independent living desirability & safety (Plante Moran report on survey of residents, prospects, and staff of life plan communities about senior living going forward)
- What Zillowing for Senior Housing Will Look Like (GlobeSt.com): Consumers need better tools to compare the quality and costs of senior living options, and boomers will expect them, along with pricing transparency and a variety of options.
- Abandoned retail sites finding new life as seniors housing (McKnight’s): As retail spaces empty amid the coronavirus pandemic, developers are paying attention to the growing population of older adults over age 65. Rather than letting the spaces sit empty, many are being transformed into comprehensive upscale retirement complexes.
- Flipping mindset to focus on the future will help CCRCs thrive post-pandemic (McKnight’s Senior Living): One of the biggest outcomes of the pandemic on the life plan/continuing care retirement community sector has been giant leaps made in recognizing the importance of connectivity within the lives of older adults and taking steps to ensure that it continues in spite of not being able to see each other in person.
- Senior living residents positive about pandemic experience: MIT AgeLab study (McKnight’s Senior Living): Older adults who live in senior living communities and took part in a recent study overwhelmingly felt positive about their experience during the coronavirus pandemic, according to a researcher at AgeLab.
- CCRCs see lower occupancy dips than non-CCRCs (NIC): Two quarters into the COVID-19 pandemic, occupancy within continuing care retirement communities has remained nearly 9 percentage points higher than occupancy within non-CCRCs.
LeadingAge resources:
- Recovery Considerations for Life Plan Communities
- Hot Topic: Who Should be Wearing Masks in IL?
- Hot Topic: What Happens When We Have a Confirmed COVID 19 Case?
- Hot Topic: How to Manage Dependent Care in Independent Living
- Hot Topic: How Are Members Managing Residents Who Leave and Return to Campus?
- Hot Topic: How to Modify Service Delivery?
- Hot Topic: Do We Continue New Moves into Our Community?
- Template Letter for Visitors to life plan communities
- Special Visitor Guidance for life plan communities
- Reopening Considerations for Life Plan Communities (QuickCast)
Provider-Specific Reopening Guidance
- Sample Move-In Policy (National Church Residences)
LeadingAge resources:
- COVID-19 Employment Law Update: Reopening the Workplace (webinar)
- “Reopening” to Visitors: A Review of CMS and States’ Guidance to Nursing Homes
- “Reopening” to Visitors: A Review of States’ Guidance for AL
- Recovery Considerations for Affordable Housing Providers
- Recovery Considerations for Life Plan Communities
- CMS Outlines Key Activities of Nursing Home Reopening
- As Reopenings Boost Threat of COVID-19, Nonprofit Aging Services Leaders Say Policymakers Must Deliver PPE, Testing & Other Resources to Protect A Generation
- Recovery Tools for Affordable Housing Operations
- QuickCasts:
- Audio interviews on reopening:
- June 25, 2020: Kim Brooks of Hebrew SeniorLife on How HSL is Thinking Through Reopening.
- July 6, 2020: Nancy Evans of CSI Support and Development on How a Large Housing Provider Copes and Thinks About Reopening
- Audio interviews on coping with the pandemic:
- April 15, 2020: Dr. Samira Beckwith of Hope Healthcare on PACE and hospice programs during the pandemic
- April 16, 2020: Toby Halliday of HUD on guidance for housing providers coping with COVID-19
- June 10, 2020: Gus Keach-Longo of The Towers at Tower Lane on Testing, Tracing, and a “Soft Opening” in Elder Housing
- June 11, 2020: Stuart Hartman of Retirement Housing Foundation on protecting residents and staff in a large national organization
- April 18, 2020: Nesa Joseph of Visiting Nurse Association of Greater St. Louis on how hospice and other community-based services have adjusted to COVID-19
- May 6, 2020: Andrea Lazarek-LaQuay of Nascentia Health on helping counties “find the virus”
- June 15, 2020: Rebekah Levit of Rogerson House on quickly responding to an early outbreak, and preparing to reopen
- June 23, 2020: Michael Soccio of Trinity Health At Home on the economics and benefits of a large home care/hospice program
- July 9, 2020: Rola O’Meally of St. Ann’s Community on shutting down—and then reinventing—adult day programs