State order requires nursing homes to test all residents and staff by late July
The widespread testing is part of a state-funded collaboration with health systems to help test residents and staff.
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(Harrisburg) — Gov. Tom Wolf is ordering Pennsylvania nursing homes to test all residents and staff for coronavirus at least once by July 24.
The so-called “baseline” testing will allow health experts to get at how many people have the virus but who are asymptomatic, said Department of Health Secretary Doctor Rachel Levine.
The testing has already been proven to work in the five homes that tested the method in a pilot program. Now, a state-funded coalition of health systems will help the state’s more than 600 homes meet that goal.
“We will ensure that it will happen by July 24…and I am very confident that every facility, every nursing home facility will be done by that time,” Levine said.
So far, more than 75 nursing facilities have completed their widespread testing, something the state says is helping to contribute to the decline in positive cases.
Nursing homes have been the center of coronavirus-related deaths in Pennsylvania, with a quarter of all cases statewide among staff or residents.
More than 4,000 nursing home and personal care facility residents have died from COVID-19 — more than two-thirds of all deaths from the virus in the commonwealth.
Brett Sholtis was a health reporter for WITF/Transforming Health until early 2023. Sholtis is the 2021-2022 Reveal Benjamin von Sternenfels Rosenthal Grantee for Mental Health Investigative Journalism with the Rosalynn Carter Fellowships for Mental Health Journalism. His award-winning work on problem areas in mental health policy and policing helped to get a woman moved from a county jail to a psychiatric facility. Sholtis is a University of Pittsburgh graduate and a Pennsylvania Army National Guard Kosovo campaign veteran.