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DeWine Relaxes COVID-19 Testing For Vaccinated Nursing Home Workers

 Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine delivers a COVID-19 briefing in December 2020.
Office of Gov. Mike DeWine
Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine delivers a COVID-19 briefing in December 2020.

Updated: 3:05 p.m., Monday, May 3, 2021

Ohio is relaxing requirements for COVID-19 testing among nursing home and assisted living employees,

Those working in nursing homes or other congregate care settings who have been fully vaccinated will no longer have to be tested for the virus twice a week, according to a new statewide health order.

鈥淯nvaccinated staff in those facilities will continue to have to be tested twice a week,鈥 DeWine said. 鈥淲e hope that this change will give encouragement to those who work in nursing homes who have not been vaccinated yet to take advantage of the opportunity to be vaccinated.鈥

Ohio鈥檚 nursing homes were hit particularly hard by the coronavirus at the outset of the pandemic, accounting for . The trend continued into early 2021, with nursing homes and long-term care facilities reporting more than 10,000 new cases in a single week in January. Along with healthcare workers, nursing home residents and staff were among the first Ohioans to be eligible for vaccination, though many workers and some residents declined the shots.

But the state has and will continue to make doses available to all nursing homes, the governor said, for new residents, new employees or anyone who turned down the opportunity to be vaccinated early on but has since changed their mind.

While more than 40 percent of Ohio residents have had at least the first shot of the vaccine regimen, DeWine said Monday the number of people getting vaccinated has been dropping 鈥渞ather dramatically.鈥

The governor said he鈥檚 asking himself and his team every day what they could be doing to get more shots in arms. One change has been dropping the appointment requirement, he said, and opening even mass vaccination sites for walk-in shot seekers, including at the .

鈥淭his is a strategy that is really paying off, not only in the Wolstein Center, but we鈥檙e seeing this across the state, more and more of our providers are offering walk-in opportunities,鈥 DeWine said.

The Wolstein Center site had more than 2,000 walk-ins last week, he said, and of the total vaccinations given there, 44 percent went to minorities and 68 percent to Clevelanders from what the Ohio Department of Health (ODH) has determined to be high-vulnerability ZIP codes.

The state鈥檚 COVID-19 cases are down for the last 24 hours, with 955 new cases confirmed, according to Monday鈥檚 statistics from ODH, along with 89 new hospitalizations and 17 new intensive care unit admissions.

High case rates continue to be concentrated in the northern part of the state, with Cuyahoga, Erie, Ashtabula and Summit counties all in the top 10 Ohio counties ranked by highest occurrence of COVID-19.

Ohio鈥檚 statewide average case rate is 147.9 as of Monday, the governor said.

鈥淲e hope this continues to go down,鈥 DeWine said. 鈥淎t least it鈥檚 headed in the right direction.鈥

This is a developing story and will be updated as more information becomes available.

Copyright 2021 90.3 WCPN ideastream. To see more, visit .

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