Nursing homes that conducted staff surveillance testing more regularly experienced significantly lower rates of COVID infections and deaths among residents, according to a new study.
“Testing is a key part of any infectious disease response, surveillance testing in particular,” says Brian McGarry, an assistant professor of medicine and public health sciences at the University of Rochester Medical Center and lead author of the study in the New England Journal of Medicine.
“This study found that greater surveillance testing of nursing home staff was associated with clinically meaningful reductions in resident COVID cases and deaths, particularly before the availability of vaccines.”
The US nursing home industry is comprised of 1.7 million staff and more than 4 million short and long stay residents. This population was particularly vulnerable during the COVID pandemic. While only comprising 2% of the US population, nursing home residents represented 20% of COVID deaths through the end of 2021.
In one of several state and federal measures implemented to protect nursing home residents, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommended—and several states mandated—that facilities in areas of high COVID transmission perform routine screening tests for asymptomatic staff up to twice weekly.
While test and staff shortages and longer turnaround times for test results made this difficult to achieve early in the pandemic, by August 2020 rapid COVID tests were widely available in nursing homes because of the federal government’s decision to prioritize these facilities for distribution.
For the study, McGarry and his coauthors compiled a database that tracked more than 90 million COVID test results for staff in 13,433 skilled nursing facilities from 2020 to 2022. The primary source of data was the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) COVID-19 Nursing Home Database. This mandatory federal repository contains information submitted on a weekly basis by skilled nursing facilities on COVID testing routines, cases, and deaths.
The team separated their analysis into three timeframes: 1) the period before COVID vaccines were available; 2) after vaccines became available, but before the Omicron wave hit; and 3) during the Omicron wave. For each of these periods, the researchers measured the association between the frequency of staff surveillance testing and the number of infections and deaths that occurred during COVID outbreaks in the facilities.
The researchers found that:
- During outbreaks, high testing frequency (1.7 COVID tests per week, per staff) was associated with fewer resident cases and deaths compared to low testing frequency (0.6 per week). This difference was particularly pronounced during the pre-vaccine period, when high testing facilities had almost 25% fewer deaths.
- Based on the estimated relationship between test frequency and COVID cases and deaths, the study authors projected that had all facilities performed an additional test per staff member per week during the pre-vaccine phase of the pandemic, 30% of resident cases and 26% resident COVID deaths could have been prevented.
- For nursing homes that predominantly used lab-processed COVID testing—as opposed to rapid, point-of-care tests—faster test turnaround time was associated with fewer resident deaths. The difference between receiving results in two days or less vs. three or more days in the pre-vaccine period was associated with 13% and 28% fewer cases and deaths, respectively.
- Surveillance testing was not strongly associated with cases or deaths during the post-vaccine/pre-omicron phase. Pre-Omicron, COVID vaccines were highly effective at preventing both infections and severe disease. When the first COVID vaccines became available, nursing home staff and residents were prioritized for vaccination.
- Frequent surveillance testing was associated with fewer resident cases but no difference in deaths during the Omicron wave, a finding consistent with the reduction in vaccine efficacy for preventing COVID infections, but not in preventing hospitalizations and deaths.
“This research demonstrates that frequent COVID surveillance testing protected nursing home residents and undoubtedly saved lives by detecting more infected staff, potentially earlier in the disease course, and disrupting potential viral transmission chains,” McGarry says.
Additional coauthors are from UCLA and Harvard University.
Source: University of Rochester
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