AARP Hearing Center
Booster uptake in U.S nursing homes remains alarmingly low, with fewer than half of residents and less than a quarter of staff up to date on their shots as of mid-December, a new AARP analysis of federal data shows. The lack of vaccine uptake occurs as another winter surge of the virus infiltrates facilities, increasing the infection and death rates among residents.
The rates have sparked concern among nursing home stakeholders and government health officials, who are calling for increased action.
“The rates have been steadily climbing, but this number is still too low,” said Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) Administrator Chiquita Brooks-LaSure, on a call with industry stakeholders last week. “As we head further into the winter months and face new variants of COVID-19, getting your residents up to date on vaccines needs to remain your number one priority.”
Between mid-October and mid-December, residents who are up to date on their COVID-19 vaccinations only increased from 40 to 47 percent, leaving more than 600,000 behind on their shots, AARP’s analysis found. Meanwhile, the rate of staff who are up to date has declined by 3 percentage points over the same period. Only 22 percent were up to date as of mid-December, leaving more than 1.5 million workers behind on their shots.
Residents and staff are considered “up to date” once they’ve gotten the bivalent booster, which became available in early September last year, or if they completed their primary vaccination series or had another booster within the past two months.
The analysis shows considerable variation among states’ up-to-date vaccination rates. In Arizona, only 26 percent of residents were up to date, representing the lowest rate in the nation. Meanwhile, South Dakota had the highest percentage of residents up to date, at 76 percent, and California led the way in up-to-date workers, at 43 percent.
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