Michigan’s health director on Thursday acknowledged that the state’s COVID-19 death toll in long-term care facilities could be undercounted.
“Not all of those are reporting,” Elizabeth Hertel, the head of the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services, told members of a state House panel, referring to nursing homes and COVID-19 deaths. She said that long-term care facilities, which include nursing homes, that have 12 or fewer residents are not required to report such deaths to the state.
A state lawmaker pressed Hertel, asking her to confirm that not all facilities with 13 or more residents are reporting deaths and, therefore, the reported number of deaths is low.
“Yes, I would say that, yes, if we don’t have all of them reporting, there could be a contention that they’re not reporting deaths, or maybe they haven’t experienced any deaths,” Hertel said.
Later in the hearing, she added: “I would like to be clear that I said ‘could be low.’ I don’t know. So I want to be clear that if we’re quoting the things I’m saying, I‘d like them to be accurate. I said they ’could be low.' We do not know because we don’t know what’s occurring in those facilities.”
Michigan Rep. Steve Johnson, a Republican who chairs the state’s House Oversight Committee, said after the hearing that Hertel “admitted that the state does not have an accurate count of COVID-19 deaths in long-term care facilities.”
He plans to ask the Michigan Auditor General to conduct a full probe into the COVID-19 deaths at the facilities.
“Michigan’s residents deserve to know how many people have died as a result of the Governor’s deadly decision to place COVID positive patients in nursing homes,” he said.
According to state data, 5,663 nursing home residents have died with COVID-19 as of mid-May. But the deaths are self-reported. And state officials reviewed nearly 1,500 other deaths that occurred between March through June 2020 and found 648, or 44 percent, were nursing home residents, according to records given over to the journalist Charlie LeDuff and the Mackinac Center Legal Foundation in a lawsuit settlement.
Appearing on LeDuff’s podcast, Steve Delie, a lawyer with the foundation said, “What they’re saying is, if you die in a hospital, we’re not going to go back and look if it’s a nursing home as your primary residence.”
Some 6,945 deaths in Michigan are classified as vital records review. Forty-four percent of the number is about 3,000. If the percentage held across the entire dataset, that would send the nursing home death toll soaring to nearly 9,000, or about half of the COVID-19 deaths the state has recorded.