Nursing home's cases total 70

State report late in reflecting data, health department says

FAYETTEVILLE -- A nursing home has had 70 covid-19 cases, but the state's report was late to reflect the data, according to the facility and the Arkansas Department of Health.

Fayetteville Health and Rehabilitation Center on Old Missouri Road has had 48 residents and 22 staff members with covid-19 as of Wednesday, according to the Health Department. The department had reported 12 cases Tuesday, including seven residents and five staff members.

Joe Perkins, spokesman for NHS Management, the company that owns Fayetteville Health and Rehabilitation Center, said the facility learned of most of the cases in July and reported them to the Health Department then. The facility has had four new cases, all residents, within the past two weeks, he said.

The home has nine residents with active cases, meaning they have not recovered. Those patients are in an isolated part of the home, and staff who cares for them don't care for other residents, he said. Twelve residents of the facility have died of the virus, Perkins said.

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One staff member has an active case and is staying home from work, Perkins said. All residents and staff have been tested.

Different facilities report in different ways and that can affect how and when the state reports cases, according to an email from Danyelle McNeill, spokeswoman for the Arkansas Department of Health. The numbers added at Fayetteville Health and Rehab are older cases, but are new to the report, she said.

Fayetteville Health and Rehabilitation is licensed for up to 140 beds, according to the Arkansas Department of Human Services.

Other homes in Northwest Arkansas have had significant outbreaks of the virus.

North Hills Life Care and Rehab near Washington Regional Medical Center has had 50 cases, including 27 residents and 23 staff members. The home did not have any active cases, or ones that are not recovered, as of Thursday, McNeill said.

A representative from the facility didn't respond to a request for comment. The home is licensed for up to 92 beds, according to the Arkansas Department of Human Services.

The Waters of Rogers on North Dixieland Road reported 19 residents and 23 staff members tested positive for covid-19 in June. No new cases have been reported since, according to the Health Department.

Additionally, Piney Ridge Treatment Center in Fayetteville, which has a residential program for children with sexual behavior problems, has had 30 residents and 15 staff members test positive for the virus as of Thursday. The Health Department report does not include how many cases are active and how many represent patients who have recovered. The latest positive case at the facility was reported Aug. 4.

A representative from Piney Ridge did not respond to a request for comment Thursday.

Teen Challenge Adventure Ranch, a boarding school for boys with addiction or behavior problems in Morrow in southwest Washington County, had 27 residents and 10 staff members who had tested positive as of Wednesday, according to the Health Department. The latest positive case at the facility was also reported Aug. 4.

"Our organization has worked closely with the Department of Human Services and the Department of Health throughout the pandemic to assure the vital services we offer are provided safely and in accordance with state department guidelines," according to an email from Jeremiah Morris, business manager at Teen Challenge. "There were positive covid-19 cases on our campus, none of which required hospitalization. Moreover, no active infections currently exist with any of our clients or staff members."

The Arkansas Department of Health releases an almost daily list of nursing homes and other congregate settings, such as jails, that have covid-19 cases among their residents and/or staff. The number of deaths have temporarily been removed from the list because the department discovered some discrepancies in how many deaths were recorded at the facilities. The department is working to make sure the data is correct before it resumes reporting the deaths for each facility, McNeill said.

McNeill confirmed neither Piney Ridge Treatment Center nor Teen Challenge Adventure Ranch had any covid-19-related deaths.

Nursing homes and assisted living facilities in the state have had a total of 1,600 residents and 1,081 staff members test positive for covid-19, according to the Health Department.

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