Nursing Homes That Flunk the Care Test
Nursing homes that want Medicare or Medicaid funds must submit to state inspections to see whether residents covered by those programs are receiving decent, safe care. The federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services posts the results of the inspections online as part of its Nursing Home Compare tool, and the results, unsurprisingly, show that such care is by no means universal. But a handful of homes out of the roughly 16,000 operating in this country do badly over and over in these inspections; CMS calls them special-focus facilities, and they are inspected more frequently and watched more closely. As of last month there were 128 such nursing homes.
Today CMS released a list of the 54 worst offenders, facilities seemingly unable to improve after many months—some of them after several years. Perhaps shining a light on them, CMS reasoned, might push these homes to change.
The thought that someone precious to you might be in one of the 54 is chilling. A look at the inspection performance of five of the homes on the list, chosen more or less at random across different parts of the country, did turn up one seriously frightening report: a home in Arkansas that in five different areas put residents in "immediate jeopardy" of their health or safety. Among them were failure to protect residents from "mistreatment, neglect, and/or theft of personal property," to keep the facilities free of hazards that could cause accidents, and to meet standards for installing, maintaining, and testing the fire alarm system.
The reports on the four other homes, on the other hand, suggested to me that if a home of interest to you is on the list, checking out its inspection report online by going to the Nursing Home Compare page might take the edge off your concern (as well as raising tough questions to pose to the administrator). The number of violations may be disconcertingly high, but only a tiny number rose to the "immediate jeopardy" level. Most were in the category of "potential for minimal harm" or "minimal harm or potential for actual harm." That doesn't make them excusable, but at least the lives of the residents of these nursing homes don't seem to be in real danger.
That CMS is pushing these bad actors into the spotlight is commendable. I'm still waiting, however, to see real data on such characteristics as infections, falls, and bedsores, not approximations and descriptions. Only painting by the numbers will give us a true picture. That day, CMS has assured me, is coming.
Tags: nursing homes
Tools:
Share
|
| Comments (5) | Print
Reader Comments
Hospitals and Bedsores
When are these same concerns about nursing homes going to be applied to hospitals? Where are the unannounced inspections of hospitals? As the Sept. 5, 2007 issue of the Wall St. Journal reports, about 15% of patients in our acute care hospitals are suffering from bedsores (pressure ulcers), yet hospitals are somehow immune to questioning.
Visit the website of the National Decubitus Foundation (NDF) for more inforation, and to subscribe to our newsletter, The Ugly Secret. www.decubitus.org.
the "worst" nursing home list
The "worst" list is a little misleading only
since there are thousands of homes that are not on the list, that deserve to be on the list. SO consumers and residents must know that just because the nursing home they are looking into is not on the list of the "worst" that does not mean the home is a "good" nursing home. It just means that possibly it did not make the list. We need to remind consumers that other nursing homes might possibly be "worst" even when not on the official list.
Bad nursing homes
To see some "bad" treatment of individuals in nursing homes, one only has to go to the newspaper or court room. There are literaly thousands of cases in which a nursing home HAS been found negligent, a person has dies. Habana, a facility in Tampa, was spotlighted recently in a well-researched and documented New York Times article. This article, by the way, has been made part of the congressional record, by a Congressman truly interested in nursing home reform. There are national reform organization that can substantiate how bad the care can really get in a nursing home. Are they all bad. No. And it is not the "home" that is bad, generally fault lies with cost-cutting for profit corporations, lazy staff, or lack of consistencies in day to day care by nurses, and their ever-changing assistants.
Add your thoughts
Your comment will be posted immediately, unless it is spam or contains profanity. For more information, please see our Comments FAQ.advertisement


U.S. News's Avery Comarow has been editor of the America's Best Hospitals annual rankings since their debut in 1990. In his reporting on all aspects of clinical medicine from the latest cholesterol guidelines to robotic surgery, he has kept one question in the front of his mind: What does this mean to patients? That perspective uniquely qualifies him to observe and comment on the efforts by hospitals and other healthcare providers to improve care and patient safety.