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Article summary: Association between nursing home crowding and COVID-19 infection and mortality in Ontario, Canada

Brown KA, Jones A, Daneman N, Chan AK, Schwartz KL, Garber GE, Costa AP and Stall NM. Association Between Nursing Home Crowding and COVID-19 Infection and Mortality in Ontario, Canada. JAMA Intern Med. Published online November 09, 2020. doi:10.1001/jamainternmed.2020.6466

This article investigates the association between “crowding” in nursing homes (measured as sharing rooms and bathrooms) and COVID-19 cases and mortality in the first months of the COVID-19 pandemic, this summary aims to provide a non-technical summary, for full details of the methods and findings, please check the original publication.

Methods and data:

The data is from a cohort of over 78,000 residents in over 600 nursing homes in Ontario (Canada), during 52 days, from the 29th March (the date of the first reported outbreak in a nursing home in Ontario) to the 20th May.

The authors used the mean number of residents per bedroom and bathroom across an entire nursing home as an “index of crowding”. Nursing home rooms in Ontario range from single rooms with their own bathroom, single rooms with shared bathroom, double occupancy rooms and quadruple occupancy rooms.

In the study COVID-19 “cases” were defined as people living in nursing homes (residents) with a laboratory confirmation of SARS-CoV-2 infection. The outcome variables considered were the cumulative incidence (total number of cases up to the end of the period studied) per 100 nursing home residents, and number of COVID-associated deaths per 100 residents. Because crowding may only affect transmission within the home, not the risk of the infection entering the home, the authors examined “COVID-19 introduction”, that is having one more confirmed resident cases.

The authors also included other variables that may affect infection spread and mortality:

Findings:

Limitations:

The authors note a number of limitations to their study. An important one to note is that some of the explanatory factors, such as crowding and whether the homes were built before the 1999 standards were strongly linked. They highlight that some of the design standards adopted in 1999 (such as larger room sizes, improved ventilation and smaller self-contained units) may have also played a role in reducing transmission and facilitating the implementation of cohorting measures.

Policy implications: