Health & Fitness

11 Mahwah Residents Have Died In Long-Term Care Facilities

At Mahwah's two listed long-term care facilities, 11 residents have died, according to state statistics.

MAHWAH, NJ — Eleven residents have died in Mahwah long-term care facilities, according to numbers released by the state on Wednesday, May 20.

At Fox Trail Memory Care, four residents have died, but, according to state statistics, there are no confirmed cases of COVID-19 among residents. There are, however, three confirmed cases of the virus among staff.

Brandywine Living reports 20 confirmed resident cases, and seven resident deaths. According to the data, there are 12 confirmed cases among staff.

Find out what's happening in Mahwahfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

No staff members at either facility have died, the data shows.

The coronavirus situation at New Jersey nursing homes has been under the microscope this week. In a Thursday news conference, Gov. Phil Murphy acknowledged that the state "can do better" regarding the outbreak at these facilities.

Find out what's happening in Mahwahfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

In total, 5,456 residents and 98 staff have died from nursing homes and other long-term care facilities in New Jersey.

Sixty-three Bergen County long-term care facilities have reported outbreaks. In those facilities, 878 residents have died and 2915 residents have tested positive for the coronavirus. An additional 1,347 staff cases have been reported, and 10 staff members have died.

Calls from experts to expand testing in the facilities have been heard, but the price tag is steep.

There are 363 facilities listed as nursing homes in the state, with residents totaling 43,315 and staff at 47,410. To test every resident and staff member would mean 90,725 total tests at an estimated cost of $13,608,750, according to a report from Patch earlier this week.

That number doesn't include assisted living or other long-term care facilities.

In addition to the mounting case numbers, there is mounting pressure on long-term care facilities to provide greater transparency to their processes.

Ninety-two of New Jersey's long-term care facilities failed to comply with a mandate to provide new coronavirus testing plans to the New Jersey Department of Health.

The long-term care facilities aren't the only groups facing criticism over the handling of nursing home data.

Senator Joseph Pennacchio is calling for a Senate Collect Committee to investigate the handling of the pandemic by Gov. Murphy's office after reports that the state altered the accounting of virus deaths in senior facilities.

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