Berlin nursing home on list of troubled facilties
The federal government for years has kept under wraps the names of hundreds of nursing homes around the country found by inspectors to have serious ongoing health, safety or sanitary problems.
Meadow View Nursing Center,
Budget cuts appear to be contributing to the problem by reducing money available for the focused inspections that are required for nursing homes on the shorter list, according to documents and interviews.
The secrecy undermines the federal commitment to ensure transparency for families going through the difficult process of finding a nursing home for a loved one and raises questions about why the names of some nursing homes are not disclosed while others are publicly identified, according to two senators who released the report on Monday.
"We've got to make sure any family member or any potential resident of a nursing home can get this information, not only ahead of time but on an ongoing basis," said Sen.
"When a family makes the hard decision to seek nursing home services for a loved one, they deserve to know if a facility under consideration suffers from systemic shortcomings," said Toomey.
The senators released a list provided to them by the
On its three most recent inspection,
Among the findings inspectors cited a case in which an aide struck an unruly resident on the arm three times. Another citation found staff failed to properly position a resident in a reclining wheelchair and the resident was found lying on the floor.
About 1.3 million Americans are nursing home residents, cared for in more than 15,700 facilities. The senators' report noted that problem nursing homes account for about 3 percent.
CMS does publicly disclose names of a smaller group of about 80 nursing homes that are getting special scrutiny to help them resolve documented quality problems. They're in what's called the Special Focus Facility program, which is more than 20 years old. Nursing homes that don't improve can be cut off by Medicare and Medicaid. But if the nursing home resolves its problems, it "graduates" from the program.
Consumers can identify special focus facilities on the government's
But there's no similar visibility for the much bigger group of some 400 nursing homes, whose problems have placed them on the official list of "candidates" for the special focus program.
These facilities "qualify for the program because they are identified as having a 'persistent record of poor care' but are not selected for participation as a result of limited resources at (CMS)," said the report from Casey and Toomey.
"Despite being indistinguishable from (special focus nursing homes) in terms of their qualifications, candidates are not publicly disclosed," the report added.
In a letter last month to Casey, CMS Administrator
"The total number of (special focus) slots and total number of (special focus) candidates nationally are based on the availability of federal resources," Verma wrote. She added that as recently as 2010, there were 167 nursing homes in the special focus program and 835 candidates. That's now down to as many as 88 special focus slots and up to 440 candidates.
She said federal budget cuts in 2014 reduced the number of available slots.
Verma said her agency is evaluating whether it has legal authority to publicly release the list of "candidate" nursing homes. The Trump administration has asked
Consumer groups say disclosure is long overdue.
It might help consumers "know what to avoid," said
The nursing home industry trade group says it generally supports transparency and takes no position on release of the list.
But
Monday's report from Sens. Casey and Toomey identified several nursing homes from the list of special focus candidates.
Among the details:
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