Rethinking Infection Control: Nursing Home Administrator Experiences during the COVID-19 Pandemic.

Publication date: Aug 01, 2024

To examine nursing home administrator perspectives of infection control practices in nursing homes at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic and characterize lessons learned. Descriptive qualitative study. Administrators from 40 nursing homes across 8 diverse health care markets in the United States. Semistructured interviews were conducted via telephone or Zoom with nursing home administrators. Interviews were repeated at 3-month intervals, for a total of 4 interviews per participant between July 2020 and December 2021 (n = 156). Qualitative analysis of interview transcripts used modified grounded theory and thematic analysis to identify overarching themes. Three major themes emerged reflecting administrator experiences managing infection control practices and nursing home operations at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. First, administrators reported that the more stringent infection control protocols implemented to manage and mitigate COVID-19 at their facilities increased awareness and understanding of the importance of infection control; second, administrators reported incorporating higher standards of infection control practices into facility-level policies, emergency preparedness plans, and staff training; and third, administrators said they and their executive leadership were reevaluating and upgrading their facilities’ physical structures and operational processes for better infection control infrastructure in preparation for future pandemics or other public health crises. Insights from this study’s findings suggest important next steps for restructuring and improving nursing home infection control protocols and practices in preparation for future pandemics and public health emergencies. Nursing homes need comprehensive, standardized infection control training and upgrading of physical structures to improve ventilation and facilitate isolation practices when needed. Furthermore, nursing home emergency preparedness plans need better integration with local, state, and federal agencies to ensure effective communication, proper resource tracking and allocation, and coordinated, rapid response during future public health crises.

Concepts Keywords
December COVID-19
Interviews COVID-19
July emergency preparedness
Nursing Female
Pandemics Health Facility Administrators
Humans
Infection Control
Infection control
Interviews as Topic
long-term care
Male
Nursing Homes
pandemic preparedness
Pandemics
Qualitative Research
SARS-CoV-2
skilled nursing facility
United States

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH Infection
disease MESH COVID-19 Pandemic
disease IDO facility
disease MESH emergency
drug DRUGBANK Etoperidone
drug DRUGBANK Tropicamide
disease VO effective

Original Article

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