You are reading

City Increasing Clinical Staff and PPE Shipments to Nursing Homes

Holliswood Center for Rehabilitation and Healthcare in Hollis reported 42 deaths as of Tuesday (Google Maps)

April 23, 2020 By Allie Griffin

The city is about to provide nursing homes with more staff and protective equipment.

The city is sending an additional 210 clinical workers to 40 nursing homes this week, doubling the number of clinical workers it has already sent to nursing home facilities across the city.

In addition, the city is boosting the weekly supply of personal protective equipment that it’s sending to nursing homes by 50 percent.

“Our city’s nursing homes are home to some of those most at risk for COVID-19,” said Mayor Bill de Blasio in a statement. “They need our support more than ever, which is why we are stepping in and sending more staff and support to assist those who protect and care for our most vulnerable.

The effort comes after several nursing homes across the state and city have reported deadly outbreaks of the novel coronavirus. Statewide, 2,869 people in nursing homes have died from the virus as of Tuesday, according to the State Department of Health.

In Queens, 640 residents in nursing homes have died from COVID-19 — more than any county in the state.

Three Queens nursing homes had more than 40 residents die — Parker Jewish Institute for Health Care and Rehab reported 46 deaths; Franklin Center for Rehabilitation and Nursing reported 45 deaths and Holliswood Center for Rehabilitation and Healthcare reported 42 deaths.

Nursing home residents are the most vulnerable to COVID-19. The disease kills seniors at a higher rate than other age groups.

The city has already been supplying nursing homes with lots of protective equipment.

Last week the city sent out a range of PPE items, including more than 40,000 N95 masks; 800,000 surgical masks; 40,000 face shields; 1.5 million gloves and at least 105,000 gowns or coveralls to 169 nursing homes across the five boroughs.

While the city is providing aid to nursing homes, it is the state that ultimately regulates them and is in charge of monitoring them.

Governor Andrew Cuomo came under fire yesterday for saying “it’s not our job” to provide the homes with PPE.

However, he said that the state has been delivering hundreds of thousands of critical PPE to nursing homes in need.

He said nursing homes must have enough PPE for staff and residents by law.

Cuomo announced today that the State Department of Health and State Attorney General will launch an investigation into nursing homes’ compliance with state standards on COVID-19, such as ensuring an adequate PPE supply. Nursing homes that aren’t in compliance could face fines and lose licenses, he added.

The City has also set up a task force to work with about half of all nursing homes in New York City to collect data on staffing, PPE supply, decedent management and other needs.

email the author: news@queenspost.com
No comments yet

Leave a Comment
Reply to this Comment

All comments are subject to moderation before being posted.


The reCAPTCHA verification period has expired. Please reload the page.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Recent News

Queens leaders react to New Year’s night mass shooting at Jamaica event space, security measures scrutinized

Queens elected officials were left shocked and dismayed by a mass shooting outside a Jamaica event space on New Year’s night that left ten young people injured while they waited to get into a “celebration of life” for a teen who was gunned down in Brooklyn.

An urgent manhunt is underway for the four young men who opened fire on people who were waiting in line outside the Amazura Concert Hall at 91-12 144th Place at around 11:20 p.m. Police from the 103rd Precinct in Jamaica responded to multiple 911 calls of shots fired and arrived at the scene to find six women and four men between the ages of 16 and 20, who suffered gunshot wounds as they ran for their lives when the gunmen fired at least thirty shots.

Port Authority dedicates LaGuardia Career Center to retired Assembly Member Jeffrion Aubry

A storied Queens political career drew to a close on New Year’s Eve when Jeffrion Aubry officially retired from the New York State Assembly, where he represented East Elmhurst and Corona in Albany for over three decades.

The Port Authority announced the renaming and dedication of the LaGuardia Career Center as the Jeffrion L. Aubry LaGuardia Career Center on Dec. 18 to honor his decades of public service and his commitment to ensuring that Queens residents reap the benefits of the redevelopment of LaGuardia Airport.

Ring it in! A guide to last-minute New Year’s Eve celebrations in Brooklyn

Dec. 31, 2024 By Kirstyn Brendlen

It’s midafternoon on New Year’s Eve, crowds are already gathering in Times Square, and you’re not sure how to ring in the new year — but there’s still time. We’ve assembled a list of some great last-minute New Year’s Eve celebrations in Brooklyn, (all with tickets still remaining!) plus a few New Year’s Day activities to get 2025 started right.