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Volume 29, Number 4—April 2023
Research

Outbreaks of SARS-CoV-2 Infections in Nursing Homes during Periods of Delta and Omicron Predominance, United States, July 2021–March 2022

W. Wyatt WilsonComments to Author , Amelia A. Keaton, Lucas G. Ochoa, Kelly M. Hatfield, Paige Gable, Kelly A. Walblay, Richard A. Teran, Meghan Shea, Urooj Khan, Ginger Stringer, Meenalochani Ganesan, Jordan Gilbert, Joanne G. Colletti, Erin M. Grogan, Carly Calabrese, Andrew Hennenfent, Rebecca Perlmutter, Katherine A. Janiszewski, Christina Brandeburg, Ishrat Kamal-Ahmed, Kyle Strand, Matthew Donahue, M. Salman Ashraf, Emily Berns, Jennifer MacFarquhar, Meghan L. Linder, Dat J. Tran, Patricia Kopp, Rebecca M. Walker, Rebekah Ess, James Baggs, John A. Jernigan, Alex Kallen, Jennifer C. Hunter, and Monitoring Outbreaks of Variants in Nursing Homes (MOVIN) Surveillance Team1
Author affiliations: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia, USA (W.W. Wilson, A.A. Keaton, L.G. Ochoa, K.M. Hatfield, P. Gable, R.A. Teran, J. MacFarquhar, J. Baggs, J.A. Jernigan, A. Kallen, J.C. Hunter); Chicago Department of Public Health, Chicago, Illinois, USA (K.A. Walblay, R.A. Teran); Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment, Denver, Colorado, USA (M. Shea, U. Khan, G. Stringer, M. Ganesan, J. Gilbert); Connecticut Department of Public Health, Hartford, Connecticut, USA (J.G. Colletti, E.M. Grogan); Iowa Department of Health and Human Services, Des Moines, Iowa, USA (C. Calabrese, A. Hennenfent); Maryland Department of Health, Baltimore, Maryland, USA (R. Perlmutter); Massachusetts Department of Public Health, Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts, USA (K.A. Janiszewski, C. Brandeburg); Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services, Lincoln, Nebraska, USA (I. Kamal-Ahmed, K. Strand, M. Donahue, M.S. Ashraf); North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services, Raleigh, North Carolina, USA (E. Berns, J. MacFarquhar); Oregon Health Authority, Portland, Oregon, USA (M.L. Linder, D.J. Tran); South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control, Columbia, South Carolina, USA (P. Kopp, R.M. Walker); Utah Department of Health, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA (R. Ess).

Main Article

Table

Descriptive characteristics of eligible nursing home outbreaks (N = 1,247), by period of SARS-CoV-2 variant predominance, United States, July 2021–January 2022*

Characteristic Outbreaks beginning during Jul 26–Nov 1: Delta period
Outbreaks beginning during Nov 2–Dec 18: mixed Delta/Omicron period
Outbreaks beginning during Dec 19–Jan 31: Omicron period
No. outbreaks (% total)
356 (29)
355 (28)
536 (43)
Individual skilled nursing facilities
347
351
536
Active outbreaks per week, median (IQR)
146 (100–163)
178 (161–237)
697 (470–838)
Jurisdiction
Chicago 8 (2.2) 51 (14.3) 22 (4.1)
Colorado 63 (17.7) 53 (14.9) 108 (20.1)
Connecticut 33 (9.3) 38 (10.7) 56 (10.5)
Iowa 3 (0.8) 1 (0.3) 1 (0.2)
Maryland 61 (17.1) 92 (25.8) 35 (6.5)
Massachusetts 40 (11.2) 71 (19.9) 184 (34.4)
Nebraska 18 (5.1) 2 (0.6) 2 (0.4)
North Carolina 38 (10.7) 15 (4.2) 21 (3.9)
Oregon 36 (10.1) 10 (2.8) 34 (6.4)
South Carolina 34 (9.6) 12 (3.4) 30 (5.6)
Utah
22 (6.2)
10 (2.8)
43 (8.0)
SARS-CoV-2 outbreak variant identified among >1 resident
Delta, B.1.672 and AY.1-AY.107 lineages 176 (49.4) 60 (16.9) 4 (0.7)
Omicron, B.1.1.529, BA.1, BA.2 lineages 4 (1.1) 50 (14.0) 194 (36.3)
Alpha 1 (0.3) 0 0
Other 2 (0.6) 1 (0.3) 0
Multiple variants identified 6 (1.7) 31 (8.7) 10 (1.9)
No sequencing information available
167 (46.9)
213 (59.8)
328 (61.3)
Initial infection in the outbreak
Staff 220 (61.8) 226 (63.5) 391 (73.1)
Resident 110 (30.9) 100 (28.1) 77 (14.4)
Both staff and resident infections at onset 26 (7.3) 29 (8.2) 67 (12.5)
Unknown or missing
0
0
1 (0.2)
Days from initial infection to subsequent resident infection in index cluster, median (IQR)
4 (0–11)
5 (0–16)
4 (0–9)
Median resident census at outbreak onset per outbreak†
Total no. residents (IQR) 89 (59–114) 98 (74–129) 79 (54–106)
Residents with booster dose % (IQR)‡ 0.0 (0–0) 55.7 (28–75) 74.0 (56–86)
Residents with primary vaccine series alone, % (IQR) 90.0 (81–96) 38.0 (21–79) 21.0 (11–35)
Residents partially vaccinated, % (IQR) 1.0 (0–3) 1.0 (0–2.3) 0.0 (0–1.8)
Residents unvaccinated, % (IQR)
7.0 (3–13)
5.5 (3–11)
5.0 (2–9)
Median resident infections in first 28 d per outbreak§
No. infected residents (IQR) 4 (0–10) 6 (1–14) 10 (4–20)
Infected residents with booster dose, % (IQR)‡ 0.0 (0–0) 0.0 (0–18) 35.7 (11–59)
Infected residents with primary vaccine series alone, % (IQR) 87.5 (71–100) 75.0 (46–100) 46.2 (27–67)
Infected residents without vaccination, % (IQR)
5.3 (0–25)
8.7 (0–23)
5.0 (0–17)
Outbreak duration
<28 d 85 (23.9) 26 (7.3) 16 (3.0)
29–41 d 93 (26.1) 23 (6.5) 71 (13.3)
>42 d
178 (50.0)
306 (86.2)
449 (83.8)
Outbreak status at end of infection surveillance period¶
Closed 340 (95.5) 308 (86.8) 474 (88.4)
Still active 16 (4.5)
47 (13.2)
62 (11.6)

*Values are no. (%) except as indicated. Dates of variant predominance were July 26–November 1, 2021 (Delta), November 2–December 18, 2021 (mixed Delta/Omicron), and December 19, 2021–January 31, 2022 (Omicron). †Resident census data were incomplete for 114 (32%) (Delta period), 133 (37%) (mixed Delta/Omicron period), and 247 (46%) (Omicron period) outbreaks. As a result, denominators used for median resident census at outbreak onset were 242 (Delta), 222 (mixed Delta/Omicron), and 289 (Omicron). ‡Residents who received a booster dose could not be distinguished from residents who received additional vaccine dose. §Infection attack rates were restricted to resident infections present at outbreak onset and those infected within first 28 days of outbreak; all outbreaks included in this analysis had at least 28 days for case ascertainment. ¶All outbreaks included in analysis began before February 1, 2022. Resident infections were reported through February 28, 2022, making March 14, 2022, the last day for an outbreak to close (2 weeks with no infections among residents or staff).

Main Article

1Additional members of the MOVIN Surveillance Team are listed at the end of this article.

Page created: February 23, 2023
Page updated: March 20, 2023
Page reviewed: March 20, 2023
The conclusions, findings, and opinions expressed by authors contributing to this journal do not necessarily reflect the official position of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the Public Health Service, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or the authors' affiliated institutions. Use of trade names is for identification only and does not imply endorsement by any of the groups named above.
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