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Lamont Signs Order Creating Nursing Home Recovery Centers

Members of the Connecticut National Guard work on a recovery center space at the Connecticut Convention Center Saturday.
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Members of the Connecticut National Guard work on a recovery center space at the Connecticut Convention Center Saturday.

Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont signed an executive order on Saturday establishing COVID-19 recovery centers in some nursing homes, a move that creates places for patients who’ve been discharged from the hospital to continue to recover. 

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Lamont announced COVID-19 recovery centers at Sharon Health Care Center in Sharon and at Northbridge Healthcare Center in Bridgeport. A third is in the works at Torrington Health and Rehabilitation Center. 

“People who live in nursing homes are among the most vulnerable, and this plan is needed in order to protect those who are negative for the virus while providing adequate areas of recovery for those who have tested positive and can be discharged from hospitals,” Lamont said in a statement Saturday.  

Of the 215 nursing homes in the state, 103 have reported at least one confirmed case of COVID-19. The state says a total of 1,181 nursing home residents have tested positive for the virus. There’ve been 322 seniors hospitalized and 165 deaths. 

Meanwhile, deaths in Connecticut from COVID-19 grew to nearly 500 on Saturday, an increase of 46 from the day before, the state said. 

According to data released by the state’s Department of Public Health, 494 deaths have been attributed to coronavirus in Connecticut. An additional 972 laboratory confirmed cases of COVID-19 were reported since Friday, bringing the statewide total to 11,510. And the total number of hospitalizations in the state due to the virus rose by 31 to 1,593.

A day after Lamont got some criticism for expanding school, restaurant, and widespread business closures until May 20, he also got some support.

New Haven Mayor Justin Elicker said in a press conference Saturday that remaining cautious is the best way to keep residents healthy and safe. 

“There’s been a little bit of messaging around the state, and definitely from Washington [D.C.], that [is] out of touch with what epidemiologists believe is the right course of action here,” Elicker said. “My concern is that people in leadership roles, pushing out a message that things might be getting better already when this is exactly the time when it’s most important for people to stay inside and practice social distancing -- my concern is that sends the wrong message and creates some uncertainty and disagreement in the public about what people should actually be doing.”

According to the Department of Public Health, New Haven County has the second highest number of deaths and confirmed cases within the state, at 107 and 2,715 respectively.

Meanwhile, in Hartford, the Connecticut National Guard began setting up 646 beds in the Connecticut Convention Center as an auxiliary site for Hartford Hospital. Hartford County has the third highest number of deaths and confirmed cases within the state, at 101 and 1,832 respectively, behind Fairfield and New Haven counties.

The state says the convention center is the third such location to be set up in this way -- the first two being Southern Connecticut State University in New Haven and Western Connecticut State University in Danbury.

Hartford Mayor Luke Bronin said he hoped the annex would not be necessary.

“But we need to be as prepared as possible as the number of coronavirus cases continues to increase in the Hartford region,” Bronin said in a statement Friday. “In the Hartford region we may still be weeks away from the peak...we are working together to do everything we can to prepare for the weeks ahead and keep our community healthy and safe.”

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Ryan Lindsay has been asking questions since she figured how to say her first few words. She eventually figured out that journalism is the profession where you can and should always ask questions. While an undergraduate at Northwestern, Ryan worked as a local reporter in Topeka, KS, and reported for the Medill Justice Project, formerly known as the Medill Innocence Project. While at the UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism, she covered arts, culture and criminal justice in Oakland for The East Bay Express and Oakland North. She has also freelanced for The Athletic Bay Area, covering the on & off-the-court lives of Golden State Warriors players. Through the Prison University Project, Ryan taught journalism & storytelling to students at San Quentin State Prison.
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