CMS NEWS
FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE
August 22,
2021
Contact: CMS
Media Relations
(202) 690-6145
| CMS Media Inquiries
Biden-Harris
Administration Takes Additional Action to Protect America’s Nursing
Home Residents from COVID-19
CMS will issue new regulation
requiring nursing homes to implement a requirement that all staff be
vaccinated against COVID-19
The Centers
for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), in collaboration with the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), is developing an
emergency regulation requiring staff vaccinations within the nation’s
more than 15,000 Medicare and Medicaid-participating nursing homes.
This new requirement is a key component of protecting the health and
safety of nursing home residents and staff by ensuring that all nursing
home staff receive COVID-19 vaccinations. Over the past several months,
millions of vaccinations have been administered to nursing home
residents and staff, and these vaccines have shown to help prevent
COVID-19 and have proven to be effective against the Delta variant.
“Keeping nursing home residents and staff safe is our priority. The
data are clear that higher levels of staff vaccination are linked to
fewer outbreaks among residents, many of whom are at an increased risk
of infection, hospitalization, or death,” said CMS Administrator
Chiquita Brooks-LaSure. “We will continue to work closely with our
partners at the CDC, long-term care associations, unions, and other
stakeholders to advance policies that keep residents and staff safe. As
we advance these new requirements, we’ll work with nursing homes to
address staff and resident concerns with compassion and by following
the science.”
Today’s action is in keeping with CMS’s authority to establish
requirements to ensure the health and safety of individuals receiving
care from all providers and suppliers participating in the Medicare and
Medicaid programs. About 62% of nursing home staff are currently
vaccinated as of August 8 nationally, and vaccination among staff at
the state level ranges from a high of 88% to a low of 44%. The
emergence of the Delta variant in the United States has driven a rise
in cases among nursing home residents from a low of 319 cases on June
27, to 2,696 cases on August 8, with many of the recent outbreaks
occurring in facilities located in areas of the United States with the
lowest staff vaccination rates.
In May, the Agency issued new regulations that require Long-Term Care
(LTC) facilities and Intermediate Care Facilities for Individuals with
Intellectual Disabilities (ICFs/IID) to educate residents, clients, and
staff about COVID-19 vaccination and, when available, offer a COVID-19
vaccine to these individuals. These regulations also mandate that LTC
facilities report weekly COVID-19 vaccination data for residents and
staff to the CDC’s National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN).
CMS will continue to analyze vaccination data for residents and staff
from the CDC’s
National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) data as an additional method
of compliance monitoring and in keeping with current practice, as well
as deploy the Quality Improvement Organizations (QIOs)—operated under
the Medicare Quality Improvement Program—to educate and engage nursing
homes with low rates of vaccinations.
CMS
strongly encourages nursing home residents and staff members to get
vaccinated as the Agency undergoes the necessary steps in the
rule-making process over the course of the next several weeks. CMS
expects nursing home operators to act in the best interest of residents
and their staff by complying with these new rules, which the Agency
expects to issue in September. CMS also expects nursing home operators
to use all available resources to support employees in getting
vaccinated, including employee education and vaccination clinics, as
they work to meet this staff vaccination requirement.
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