The New Mexico State Veterans’ Home has been considered a “hot spot” by the Aging and Long-Term Services Department since Oct. 23, according to ALTSD spokesperson Breanna Anderson.
No visitors are allowed until positive COVID-19 tests for staff and residents go back to zero.
NMSVH Administrator Juliet Sullivan was asked to comment on the recent spike in positive cases, but said, “I really can’t.”
Six more residents and six more staff test positive for COVID-19 between Oct. 22 and Oct. 29. The week before, two residents and four staff had tested positive.
According to ALTSD’s Anderson, “hot spot” status requires all staff and all residents be tested once a week until no positive cases are identified.
Normal “surveillance testing,” when no current cased have been found, requires all staff and residents be tested on a rotating basis once a month, Anderson said.
Since the coronavirus pandemic began, eight out of about 121 residents (a changing number) have tested positive, which is 6.6 percent of the residents.
The cumulative number testing positive among staff is 15 out of 196, which is a 7.6 percent of the staff.
Last week the New Mexico Environment Department, in its “daily rapid response data” portal, reported 54 staff members at the home had tested positive, but that was incorrect information.
The NMED took down the portal on Oct. 23 to “migrate our data to a new format, which will be ready shortly,” said NMED Public Information Officer Maddy Hayden on Oct. 29.
Various state departments, such as the ALTSD and NMED, send out rapid response teams to nursing homes and businesses after an employee or resident has tested positive, to ensure safe protocols are being observed.