DALLAS CENTER, Iowa 鈥 鈥淐ovid is not pretty in a nursing home,鈥 said Deb Wityk, a 70-year-old retired massage therapist who lives in one called Spurgeon Manor, in rural Iowa. She twice contracted the disease and is eager to get the newly approved vaccine because she has chronic lymphocytic leukemia, which weakens her immune system.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention approved the latest vaccine on Sept. 12, and the new shots became available to the general public within the past week or so. But many nursing homes will not begin inoculations until well into October or even November, though infections among this vulnerable population are rising steeply, to nearly 1%, or 9.7 per 1,000 residents, as of mid-September from a low of 2.2per 1,000 residents in mid-June.
鈥淭he distribution of the new covid-19 vaccine is not going well,鈥 said Chad Worz, CEO of the American Society of Consultant Pharmacists. 鈥淥lder adults in those settings are certainly the most vulnerable and should have been prioritized.鈥
With the end of the formal public health emergency in May, the federal government stopped purchasing and distributing covid vaccines. That has added complications for operators of nursing homes who have encountered resistance throughout the pandemic in persuading employees and residents to get the shots.
The coronavirus decimated nursing homes during the first two years of the pandemic, killing more than 200,000 residents and staffers. Elizabeth Sobczyk, project director of Moving Needles, a CDC-funded initiative to improve adult immunization rates in long-term care facilities, said without a government agreement to purchase the shots, vaccine manufacturers will make large quantities only once CDC experts have recommended approval.
鈥淭hen they need to be FDA inspected 鈥 we want safe vaccines 鈥 then there is contracting and rollout,鈥 Sobczyk said. 鈥淪o I completely understand the frustration, but also why the availability wasn鈥檛 immediate.鈥
Even once the shots are available, nursing homes face continuing resistance to the vaccine among nurses and aides. Without state mandates for workers to be vaccinated, most nursing homes are relying on persuasion, and that is often proving difficult.
鈥淧eople want covid-19 to be in the rearview mirror,鈥 said Leslie Eber, medical director of Orchard Park Health Care Center in Centennial, Colorado. 鈥淲e鈥檙e going to have to remind people more this year that covid-19 is not benign. Maybe it鈥檚 a cold for some people, but it鈥檚 not going to be a cold for the folks I care for.鈥
Sixty-two percent of nursing home residents are up to date on their vaccines, meaning they received the second booster available before this month鈥檚 new shot. That鈥檚 an improvement over the 38% rate at the start of October 2022, according to the most recent federal data as of mid-September.
But only 25% of nursing home employees are up to date, which is close to last October鈥檚 rate.
In a written statement, the Department of Health and Human Services said that it will be identifying long-term care facilities with low vaccination rates and reaching out to ensure 鈥減roven infection prevention and control measures are being implemented to protect seniors.鈥漈his year, more nurses and aides will have to obtain shots at drugstores or health centers, on their personal time rather than at work. Many homes run clinics, with their long-term care pharmacies supplying the vaccine as they did before, but face extra bureaucratic hassles in billing insurers for the vaccine for both residents and employees.
On top of that, homes are rolling out a new vaccine for a dangerous respiratory virus, RSV, which will be a third shot for many residents along with vaccines for covid and the flu.
The trio of vaccines will create more administrative complexity for nursing homes since this year they must bill Medicare to be reimbursed for the shots. The covid vaccine should be charged to Medicare Part B, which covers outpatient and physicians鈥 services, but the RSV vaccine must be billed to Medicare Part D, the prescription drug benefit.
鈥淭he United States has been phenomenal in screwing up vaccinations,鈥 said David Nace, chief medical officer of UPMC Senior Communities in Pittsburgh. 鈥淭his idea that some are under Part B and some are under Part D and some can be billed by a pharmacy 鈥 who in God鈥檚 name came up with this?鈥
While Medicare will pay for vaccines for most nursing home residents, employees may face private insurance red tape and, for a small group, potential out-of-pocket costs.
Leslie Frane, an executive vice president of the Service Employees International Union, which represents more than 134,000 workers in 1,465 nursing homes, said that many homes had stopped running clinics in their facilities and told workers to go to the drugstore to get vaccinated. She said this would lead to more workers skipping their shots.
鈥淭here鈥檚 very little time, given how many nursing home workers work multiple jobs,鈥 she said.
The CDC has arranged for 25 million to 30 million people lacking health insurance or whose insurance doesn鈥檛 cover the complete cost of the vaccine to get free covid shots at select pharmacies, health centers, and medical offices listed at vaccines.gov. Frane said that program is not well known among workers, and Worz said distribution is favoring the large pharmacy chains, slowing access in rural communities. Of the nation's 19,400 independent pharmacies, federal officials said 627, many in rural areas, are enrolled in the program and 100 are being added.
A big obstacle, though, continues to be resistance to the vaccination among nurses and aides. Like many facility owners, Avalon Health Care Group, which owns or operates more than a dozen nursing homes in Western states, is not mandating staff be vaccinated. Sabine von Preyss-Friedman, Avalon鈥檚 chief medical officer, said she tries to address the reasons with each worker and won't abandon the push.
鈥淲e鈥檙e not going to just say, 鈥極K, everyone get vaccinated鈥 and then forget about it,鈥 she said.
Avalon鈥檚 homes have used modest financial incentives, such as organizing contests between different units, with the winner getting prizes like a pizza party or a drawing for a gift certificate from a department store, and those efforts will resume this year.
Jim Wright, medical director of Our Lady of Hope Health Center and two other nursing homes in Richmond, Virginia, said that rewards and respectful persuasion were not enough to sway his homes鈥 employees. They tend to be in their 20s and 30s and are not worried about catching covid, which many of them have already weathered.
鈥淭hey most likely will not do it to protect the residents or protect themselves,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know what the answer is.鈥
Sheena Bumpas, a certified nursing assistant in Duncan, Oklahoma, and vice chair of the National Association of Health Care Assistants, plans on getting this season鈥檚 shot but said some of her colleagues won鈥檛.
鈥淣ow that the public health emergency has ended, I think people are done with it,鈥 she said.
Edenwald Senior Living, a nursing home within a retirement community in Towson, Maryland, is requiring its workers to be vaccinated unless they can justify an exemption for medical or religious reasons.
As of Sept. 10, about three-fourths of the home鈥檚 workers were up to date with their previous covid vaccines, which is triple the national rate for nursing home employees, according to federal records.
Edenwald is relying on the Giant supermarket pharmacy to administer the shots in the auditorium of its independent living section. Sign-up sheets have already been distributed for clinics later this month. The home is billing workers鈥 insurance for the shots, but facility managers said it will pay for employers without health coverage.
鈥淭his is our seventh clinic for covid,鈥 said Meghan Curtis, Edenwald鈥檚 director of care management. 鈥淲e鈥檝e kind of got it down pat.鈥
Swati Gaur, medical director of three nursing homes affiliated with Northeast Georgia Health System, said leaders may offer recalcitrant employees the option to take the Novavax vaccine. It relies on more traditional virus-blocking technology than the Moderna or Pfizer shots that use messenger RNA.
鈥淲e are basically saying, 鈥榃hy are you not taking the vaccine? Have you thought about Novavax? It鈥檚 manufactured like the flu vaccine,鈥欌 Gaur said.
For the first time, nursing home residents will be offered a vaccine for respiratory syncytial virus, or RSV. The virus causes the hospitalizations of as many as 160,000 people 65 and older each year, killing up to 10,000. Most nursing homes are coupling the flu vaccine with either the covid vaccine or the RSV vaccine, but not attempting to give all three simultaneously.
Gaur said because of the novelty of the vaccine and the relative unfamiliarity with RSV, clinicians will need to spend more time explaining the reason for the shots.
In Dallas Center, Iowa, Spurgeon Manor, an independent nonprofit home, is partnering with the pharmacy from a nearby Hy-Vee grocery store to provide the covid shot, most likely in early October, to 85 residents of the nursing home and an adjoining assisted living center as well as employees.
Alana Marean, Spurgeon鈥檚 assistant director of nursing, said workers will be encouraged to receive the shots, but she guessed that not even half would do so. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot of stigma out there about it,鈥 she said.

Resident Lee Giese, 95, a retired truck driver, said he鈥檚 looking forward to the latest shot after coming down with covid last winter. He suspects his earlier vaccinations helped protect him from more serious symptoms.
He expects most residents of his facility will get the shots, but a few will refuse. 鈥淪ome people have a death wish,鈥 he said.
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