California Nursing Home Residents Told To Find New Homes
Some of California’s most vulnerable nursing home residents, many of whom have nowhere else to go, are receiving letters from their health care plans saying they are no longer eligible for long-term care.
In one notable example, three dozen nursing home residents in
The residents included a 68-year-old amputee with diabetes, memory loss and kidney disease who required dialysis three times a week, and an 82-year-old man with congestive heart failure and diabetes who wasn’t strong enough to transfer himself from his bed to a wheelchair, Jones said.
“It just felt like we were tossing our seniors and disabled adults,” Jones said of the letters, which arrived in
The
But California Healthline interviewed multiple long-term care advocates and legal aid attorneys on the
Under managed care, the state pays plans a monthly rate for each recipient to provide all of the medically necessary services that person needs. By comparison, under traditional “fee-for-service”
Long-term care advocates fear that the trend means more frail people will be forced out of nursing homes as managed care plans look to their bottom lines.
“We’re looking at multiplying this problem across the state,” said
The typical nursing home population in
Exacerbating the problem, Coleman added, is a shortage of assisted living facilities willing to serve
To be eligible for nursing home coverage under
CenCal sent the termination letters to the
“We don’t like to do this,” he said. “It’s destabilizing; we don’t want to disrupt people’s lives. We do have state regulations that we have to follow.”
Last month, the
Freeman said the plan is reconsidering some residents’ eligibility, given the clarification. And Jones, the
But residents of other homes — and in other regions — are still facing denials.
David Green, 60, a registered nurse in
She’d landed in a nursing home in 2016 after a bout of sepsis, he said. At first, she was so weak, she couldn’t walk. By the time she got the letter, her strength had improved, but she still had diabetes, kidney disease, hypertension, atrial fibrillation, breast cancer, memory loss and pain in her artificial knees, Green said.
Green sought out the
“It’s very nerve-racking,” he said.
“I’m not sure where those folks might end up,” she said.
Golick, the ombudsman for several northern counties, said a man in his 80s in
“Rural areas are really scary,” she said. “Where the hell do you go?”
In the meantime, nursing homes find themselves in a difficult situation. They cannot legally discharge residents who don’t have a safe place to go, but they are no longer paid to keep them. In some cases, including in
“We’re all watching this closely,” said
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