COVID-19 outbreak kills 9 at Watsonville nursing facility

The outbreak at the Watsonville Post Acute Center in Santa Cruz County comes as the rates of new COVID-19 cases fall in that county and in California as a whole.

A coronavirus outbreak at a skilled nursing facility on California’s central coast has killed nine people and infected more than 60 residents and staff, health officials said Wednesday.

The outbreak at the Watsonville Post Acute Center in Santa Cruz County comes as the rates of new COVID-19 cases fall in that county and in California as a whole.

Earlier this week, KTVU reported that Parkrose Gardens in Fairfield has lost a total of four residents to confirmed coronavirus, with at least that many deaths still under investigation as potentially linked to the deadly virus.

The first case was discovered on Sept. 17 when a resident tested positive for COVID-19 after going to a hospital for unrelated medical reasons, said Dr. David Ghilarducci, deputy public health officer for the county.

Testing quickly showed another two dozen residents had the virus but weren’t showing any symptoms, he said.

The facility currently has 56 residents. Seventeen currently are COVID-19-positive and have been segregated from other residents, 27 tested negative but were quarantined because of suspected exposure and a dozen residents showed no evidence of exposure, Ghilarducci said.

The 15 staff members who tested positive were isolated at home or in hotel rooms provided by the county, Ghilarducci said.

That caused a staffing problem and members of the National Guard were brought in to help, he said.

Half the deaths occurred over the past two weeks, and the rest occurred over the weekend, he said. They represent half of the 18 COVID-19 deaths that have occurred in the county since the pandemic started.

“We don’t know right now what caused this to blow up,” he said of the outbreak. “I’m speaking with their medical director almost daily trying to figure this out’.”

State public health workers also are involved, he said.

Other nursing facilities in the county have shown only a few cases over the past months, he said.

Skilled nursing facilities were hotspots of COVID-19 infection during the early months of the pandemic. Residents are usually elderly and have a variety of health problems that put them at greater risk of getting a serious case of the coronavirus.

At least 4,692 residents and staff members have died, representing nearly a third of all California COVID-19 deaths since the start of the pandemic, according to figures from the California Department of Public Health.

Last week, Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a law requiring that skilled nursing facilities to report disease-related deaths during a communicable disease emergency to the state Department of Public Health within 24 hours. The measure also requires nursing homes to have a full-time “infection preventionist” on staff and to have a plan in place for preventing infections.

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