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Biden’s promise of better nursing home care will require more workers

DREAMSTIME
                                Low staffing levels could be an impediment to improving care at nursing homes.

DREAMSTIME

Low staffing levels could be an impediment to improving care at nursing homes.

The Biden administration has identified core impediments to better nursing home care in its proposed overhaul of the industry, but turning aspirations into reality will require a complex task: mandating adequate staffing levels for all homes without bankrupting those that can’t afford far higher labor costs.

President Joe Biden’s proposals for the nation’s 15,000 skilled nursing facilities would lead to the most substantial increase in federal nursing home regulation since Congress reformed the industry in 1987. The centerpiece of the effort is establishing minimum staffing levels for facilities. To date, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Serv­ices requires “adequate” staffing but specifically mandates only a skeleton crew of round-the-clock nursing coverage and one registered nurse who works at least eight hours each day.

CMS has rebuffed requests to mandate higher staffing levels in the past, saying each facility should “make thoughtful, informed staffing plans.” But multiple examinations — including a thorough CMS study in 2001 — have concluded staffing levels are frequently inadequate, particularly on nights and weekends. Studies have found that homes with higher staffing levels have fewer patient injuries. The 2001 study set a standard that many nursing homes currently don’t meet, saying optimal care required roughly 1 staffer for every 7 short-stay patients — like those recovering from a hospital stay — and 1 staffer for every 6 long-stay residents.

Biden is ordering CMS to conduct a similar study and incorporate it into a formal proposal within a year.

“We would not be surprised to see that number (of staffers) be higher in a new study, because we know the care needs for residents and acuity levels have actually increased over the last 20 years,” said Lori Smetanka, executive director of the National Consumer Voice for Quality Long-Term Care, which advocates for older people who get services in nursing homes, assisted living facilities and at home.

Requiring adequate staffing levels won’t solve the problem many homes face in finding and retaining nurses and aides, a systemic issue made worse by the pandemic. And it’s likely that many facilities — particularly those with the largest share of Medicaid residents — would struggle to afford substantial increases in their workforces.

How many more workers nursing homes can afford remains a mystery even though the industry is the most tightly regulated type of health care provider. For-profit nursing homes, which are the majority, often appear poorer than they are because their owners shift money to themselves through rent or management fees paid to corporations they also control. These convoluted networks are often impossible to untangle with the information the government collects.

Much of Biden’s plan promises to dig deeper into the finances of homes and make that information publicly available. “It’s just been so complicated,” said David Grabowski, a professor of health care policy at Harvard Medical School. “They’re going to finally determine who owns this building, what the arrangements are there, how the dollars really flow. That’s essential. We should have done this years ago.”

And Biden is calling for tracking the quality and finances of nursing home chains, in addition to facility by facility as is the current practice.

“We’ve been urging that for 15 or 20 years,” said Charlene Harrington, a professor emeritus at the University of California-San Francisco School of Nursing.

The administration said it wanted Congress to give it the authority to ban from the Medicare and Medicaid programs facilities owned by people or corporations with terrible track records of running facilities. And Biden is asking Congress to give CMS almost $500 million more for inspections, a 25% increase, and hike the maximum fine for an individual violation to $1 million from $21,000. That particularly targets habitually poor-performing facilities, which are subjected to more intense oversight. A 2017 Kaiser Health News investigation found that more than half of homes in the program harmed patients or put them in serious jeopardy after CMS declared them improved.

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Kaiser Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues.

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