Nursing Homes Located in Socially Deprived Communities Have Been Disproportionately Affected by COVID-19

Authors

  • Justin Lord, Ph.D., CMA, FHFMA Louisiana State University at Shreveport
  • Ganisher Davlyatov, Ph.D., MD University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center
  • Akbar Ghiasi, Ph.D., MHA University of the Incarnate Word
  • Robert Weech-Maldonado, Ph.D. University of Alabama at Birmingham

Abstract

Health inequities vary along social and economic gradients.  The COVID-19 pandemic and nursing home infections have highlighted this fact.  Using the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Nursing Home COVID-19 Public File, Brown University's LTCFocus, Robert Graham Center's Social Deprivation Index, and CMS Nursing Home Payroll-Based Journal Staffing Data.  We examined the relationship between community resource scarcity, as conceptualized by the Social Deprivation Index (SD), and COVID-19 incidence rates in nursing homes.  After controlling for interstate differences, organizational enabling factors, as well as, facility-level resident and community-level characteristics, nursing homes located in communities with medium levels of social deprivation had 4.4% more COVID-19 infection rates (Incidence Rate Ratio [IRR] = 1.04; p < 0.05) and communities with high levels of social deprivation had 7.5% higher COVID-19 infection rates (Incidence Rate Ratio [IRR] = 1.07; p < 0.01) as compared to nursing facilities located in areas of low social deprivation. From a policy perspective, nursing homes, that are located in socially deprived communities, may need additional resources, such as funding for staffing and personal protective equipment in the face of the pandemic.  The COVID-19 pandemic has sharpened the focus on healthcare disparities and societal inequalities in the delivery of long-term care.

Author Biographies

  • Justin Lord, Ph.D., CMA, FHFMA, Louisiana State University at Shreveport
    Louisiana State University at Shreveport
  • Ganisher Davlyatov, Ph.D., MD, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center
    University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center
  • Akbar Ghiasi, Ph.D., MHA, University of the Incarnate Word
    University of the Incarnate Word
  • Robert Weech-Maldonado, Ph.D., University of Alabama at Birmingham
    University of Alabama at Birmingham

References

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Published

2021-12-12

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Articles