Preparing for COVID-19 in Nursing Homes and Long-term Care Facilities


Nursing homes and other long-term care facilities can take steps to assess and improve their readiness to respond to the novel Coronavirus disease (COVID-19). The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) has formulated a checklist for facilities to assist in the development of a comprehensive response plan that includes these key areas:


Rapid identification and management of ill residents

Considerations for visitors and consultant staff

Supplies and resources

Sick leave policies and other occupational health considerations

Education and training

Surge capacity for staffing, equipment and supplies, and postmortem care

This tool, in conjunction with other assessments, identifies strengths and weaknesses of a facility’s current preparedness efforts. It does not describe mandatory requirements or standards. Rather, it highlights important areas for facilities to review to in order to prepare for the possibility of residents testing positive for COVID-19.

Additional information is available on the CDC website.

This link will take you to the checklist: https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/downloads/novel-coronavirus-2019-Nursing-Homes-Preparedness-Checklist_3_13.pdf

——————————————————————————————————————-

You can also use this short-cut: bit.ly/2vB2gaW

Edited for clarification on April 1, 2020

NOT Your Typical Coronavirus: The Difference Between a Cold, the Flu, and COVID-19

The Coronavirus, or COVID-19, is a new strain of coronavirus and is spreading quickly worldwide. China was the first to report the viral strain. We first heard of the outbreak in December 2019.

COVID-19 is the most serious and deadliest strain of coronavirus that scientists have identified to date. Yes, there are other strains in existence. The most common, a milder form of coronavirus, is one we are all familiar with: the common cold.

COVID-19, however, can cause severe illness and even death. The elderly and people with compromised health and immune systems, like heart and lung disease, hypertension, and diabetes, are at serious risk. Children and younger adults appear to be less affected by the virus. Many young adults exhibit mild symptoms, and some report having no symptoms despite being tested positive for the virus. But be aware– they can pass the virus on to others. Scientists don’t know why children and young adults are not as strongly affected. However, those with pre-existing health conditions may be have different risk factors.

So how can you determine if your symptoms are related to the common cold, the flu, or is COVID-19? If you have traveled out of the country where COVID-19 is quickly spreading, and it’s been within the past 14 days or less, you should seek medical treatment. 

However, do not go directly to the hospital without contacting either your physician or the hospital first. If you have COVID-19, there’s a good chance you will infect others. Healthcare professionals will ensure you get the appropriate testing and treatment, and protect other staff and patients.

Here is a symptom chart to help you determine the difference between a cold, the flu and COVID-19. It was developed by the World Health Organization and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Updated Links – CNA State Requirements

In our book, “The “How-to” Guide on Becoming a Certified Nursing Assistant, we provide links to CNA resources for each state and U.S. territories.  We thought it would be cool to have this information literally at your fingertips. Very ambitious of us, indeed, because frequently websites get updated and pages are moved or links are changed.

Since our ebook was published, we’ve noticed a dozen or so URLs have changed. We updated the first group in the e-book, but have decided that we will put future updates on our blog. If the url is very long, we’ll include a short-cut or bitlink.  If the URL doesn’t work, we encourage you to try the bitlink because we noticed that it will often get you there when the organizational link won’t.

It’s our goal to check and post changes at least twice a year; quarterly if we’re really ambitious and if there’s interest.

Here’s the group of updated links for this period.

District of Columbia 

https://doh.dc.gov/service/certified-nurse-aides-licensing

http://bit.ly/2vpowyT

Georgia

https://www.mmis.georgia.gov/portal

http://bit.ly/2ujsNGS

Iowa 

http://www.dia.iowa.gov

Illinois

http://dph.illinois.gov

Kansas  

http://Kansas.gov

http://bit.ly/2bXBI87

Massachusetts 

http://mass.gov/portal

 Michigan  

http://www.michigan.gov/lara/0,4601,7-154-63294_74190—,00.html

http://bit.ly/2teE8IF

Nebraska  

http://dhhs.ne.gov/publichealth/Pages/crlCNAHome.aspx

http://bit.ly/ 2d9ZfAC

Texas  

https://hhs.texas.gov/doing-business-hhs/licensing-credentialing-regulation/nurse-aide-training-competency-evaluation-program-natcep

http://bit.ly/2tWyWGD

West Virginia  

http://ohflac.wvdhhr.org/

 

World Backup Day

Do you know that nearly a third of all users of computer devices have never backed up their data? If you have ever lost a device– such as a smartphone, laptop or tablet–or your device gets damaged, you know how that can wreak havoc in your life. Your valuable contact list, photos, and messages—gone. Unless you had backed up your files.

Today is World Backup Day Be sure you always have a backup, or a second copy, of all your files such as documents, pictures, videos, and emails! #WorldBackupDay