CDC to Send Hawai‘i Millions to Protect Nursing Homes Amid Pandemic
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has allocated $4.5 million in new federal funding from the American Rescue Plan to the Hawai‘i State Department of Health support nursing homes and other long-term care facilities that may experience COVID-19 outbreaks, as well as strengthen efforts to protect health care workers and fight infectious diseases.
The CDC announced the allocation on Friday, Sept. 17, 2021.
“Last year’s tragic outbreak at the Yukio Okutsu State Veterans Home has shown us how quickly COVID-19 can spread, how devastating it can be for the elderly, and how important it is to be prepared,” said US Senator Brian Schatz (D- Hawai‘i), a member of the Senate Appropriations Committee. “This new funding gives us more resources to increase staffing when there are outbreaks in nursing homes, protect patients and health care workers, and save lives.”
The $4.5 million in funding includes nearly $2 million in funding to staff, train and deploy strike teams to assist skilled nursing facilities, nursing homes, and other long-term care facilities with known or suspected COVID-19 outbreaks.
The remaining $2.6 million will help the Hawai‘i DOH expand capacity in several areas to better fight infectious diseases, including to expand public health support to health care facilities, assist health care workers to prevent infections more effectively, support rapid response to detect and contain infectious disease threats, and expand efforts to design and implement effective infection prevention and control training and education to frontline health care staff, among other activities.