New York Democratic Governor Andrew Cuomo faced questions on Friday about his handling of the COVID-19 pandemic as it pertains to nursing homes, which comes just a day after the state’s attorney general indicated that nursing home deaths in the state were undercounted by approximately 50 percent.
Cuomo responsible for New York nursing home deaths
“Your staff is often unapologetically aggressive when it comes to defending your policies, particularly on social media,” a reporter said to Cuomo during a press conference. “But in this case, many of the people who disagree with how this whole situation was handled with the nursing homes have a very personal connection to it. They’ve lost someone in the pandemic tied to a nursing home. So the policy aside—who was right, who was wrong—just as a father, as a son, what would your message be to those families today?”
“What I would say is everyone did the best they could. When I say the State Department of Health, as the report said, the State Department of Health followed federal guidance. So if you think there was a mistake, then go talk to the federal government,” Cuomo responded. “It’s not about pointing fingers of blame. It’s that this became a political football, right? Look, whether a person died in the hospital or died in a nursing home, it’s, the people died. People died.”
“96% of the people who die are older people with comorbidities, which happens to be the population that lives in nursing homes,” he continued. “It’s continuing today, even with all the testing that we’re doing. If you look at New York State, we have a lower percentage of deaths in nursing homes than other states. A third of all deaths in this nation are from nursing homes. New York state we’re only about 28% … but we’re below the national average in number of deaths in nursing homes.”
Cuomo on nursing home deaths: “Who cares [where they died]? They died!” pic.twitter.com/VECpQNKF2I
— Tom Elliott (@tomselliott) January 29, 2021
The China Virus continues in 2021
“But who cares? 3,328 died in a hospital, died in a nursing home. They died,” Cuomo continued. “And I dealt with the loss of my father. The pain is so incredible. And inexplicable. And why and why and why. It’s a tragedy. It’s a tragedy. And I understand maybe the instinct to blame or to find some relief for the pain that you’re feeling. But it is a tragedy and it’s a tragedy that continues today. I don’t believe, I believe everybody did the best they could. I believe the federal government, CDC, I believe they gave the best guidance they could.”
“I believe they give the best guidance they can today. I believe the State Department of Health, they gave their best guidance and made the best decisions on the facts they had. But doesn’t mean people didn’t die. And it doesn’t mean people won’t die today. And people won’t die tomorrow. And it doesn’t mean that I’m not going to get up here tomorrow or Monday and read a death number on that screen and think about the 100 people who died and then the hundreds of family members who are home crying that day. And that’s going to continue.”