The coronavirus is surging back into Minnesota's senior homes, with facilities running desperately short of the one resource they cannot go without — staff.
Across the state, a second wave of coronavirus cases is raging through nursing homes and assisted-living facilities that escaped the first wave of outbreaks this spring, once again threatening older adults who are most at risk of dying from COVID-19, the respiratory disease caused by the virus.
Nearly 11,000 residents have tested positive for the new coronavirus, with one out of five dying from COVID-19 complications.
This time, the virus is infiltrating many facilities in rural communities where staffing shortages are more severe and residents have fewer options. Facilities in counties such as Aitkin and Mille Lacs that largely avoided the virus during the spring are now reporting explosive new outbreaks.
An alarming 90% of Minnesota's nursing homes and 58% of the state's assisted-living facilities have active outbreaks of the virus, according to new data from the Minnesota Department of Health. That includes more than 70 senior care homes that didn't have any COVID-19 infected residents one month ago.
The spike in cases is causing a feared rerun of the pandemic's harrowing early months, when mounting deaths forced facilities to shut their doors to families and to scramble to find resources. After ebbing over the summer, coronavirus deaths in Minnesota's nursing homes and assisted-living settings have surged 49% since late September and are now approaching levels not seen since May. Overall, long-term care facilities have been tied to 2,244 deaths since the start of the pandemic, representing 68% of all COVID-19 deaths in the state.
"This is really our worst fear imaginable," said Amanda Johnson, a nurse and vice president of clinical operations at Tealwood Senior Living, a Bloomington-based company that operates 30 senior facilities in Minnesota.
The development is a discouraging result of uncontrolled community transmission of the virus in many parts of the state, as colder weather pushes more people indoors for gatherings with friends and family.