With COVID-19 vaccine near, Brown researchers to track adverse impacts in nursing home residents
Brown University
As the U.S. moves toward the highly anticipated approval of the first COVID-19 vaccines, residents of nursing homes and other long-term care facilities are likely to join health care workers as groups who will be among the earliest vaccine recipients in most states.
This
week, the National Institute on Aging awarded a grant to a team of researchers
based at Brown University to design a monitoring system to identify and track
adverse health impacts after elderly nursing home residents receive COVID-19
vaccinations.
“Nursing home residents constitute about 40% of all deaths due to COVID in the nation, but make up less than one half of one percent of the U.S. population,” said lead investigator Vincent Mor, a professor of health services, policy and practice at Brown’s School of Public Health.
“Residents are in desperate need of protection from the virus, but no one as sick as a nursing home resident was enrolled in any of the vaccine trials.”
The
new effort, a supplement to a $53.4 million IMPACT
Collaboratory grant awarded to Brown and Hebrew SeniorLife in
2019, provides funding for Mor and a team of Brown researchers to work with Genesis HealthCare,
one of the nation’s largest post-acute care providers with more than 350
facilities across 25 states.
The
researchers will monitor the occurrence of adverse events — diagnoses, signs
and symptoms that virologists, epidemiologists and clinicians believe may be
associated with the vaccine — following COVID-19 vaccinations to residents in
facilities affiliated with Genesis. The work is part of a U.S. Centers for
Disease Control effort to establish a vaccine adverse event monitoring system
for COVID-19, particularly focused on frail elderly residents who were not
included in vaccine trials.
“We
don't know how frail seniors will react to the vaccine, since it will roll out
so quickly once distribution begins,” he said. “Under normal circumstances, we
would not know until most residents have been vaccinated if the rate of adverse
events is higher than expected. Therefore, the ‘real-time’ adverse event
monitoring system we are establishing cooperatively with the CDC and Genesis is
unique and critically important to understand how frail seniors will respond to
the vaccines.”
Since the beginning of the pandemic, researchers at Brown have worked with Genesis to examine data and uncover patterns that can be used to develop strategies to mitigate the impact of the pandemic in nursing homes.
Mor said the early detection
monitoring system will be based on electronic medical records from Genesis,
updated daily and analyzed by researchers at Brown to identify adverse effects.
The team will work with the Rhode Island
Quality Institute — a center led by Neil Sarkar, an associate
professor at Brown’s Warren Alpert Medical School and director of the Brown Center for
Biomedical Informatics — to design the system.
The
$273,187 award from the National Institute on Aging, a division of the National
Institutes of Health, is one of multiple IMPACT Collaboratory supplemental
grants supporting research related to the COVID-19 pandemic.
The work is supported under award No. U54AG063546.
This story was adapted from a news release from
the Brown University School of Public Health.