Long Term Care Facilities

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

“20 Common Nursing Home Problems”

The average consumer knows more about cars, cell phones or renting an apartment than they do about nursing homes. This guide spotlights some of the most common illegal practices and explains strategies that residents and family members can use to avoid or reverse illegal procedures.

The National Senior Citizen Law Center (NSCLC) has published a guide the spotlights some of the most common illegal practices and explains strategies that residents and family members can use to avoid or reverse illegal procedures.

Did You Know That...

--A nursing home resident or family member must be allowed to participate in planning care?

--A resident has the right to choose when to wake up or go to bed?

--A resident's family cannot be restricted to specific visiting hours?

 Order your guide today: http://www.nsclc.org/publications/manuals/manual.2006-06-08.3692004924

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Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Investigative Report Questions Five-Star Rating System for Nursing Homes

 

How reliable are the ratings given nursing homes under the five-star rating system that the federal government recently instituted? Not very, according to an investigative report by the Massachusetts magazine Commonwealth.

In an in-depth discussion of the rating system, the report highlights numerous instances in which facilities received above-average overall ratings despite being cited for serious deficiencies in care, some of which resulted in serious injuries of residents.

The rating system, which was launched in December 2008 by the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), gives nursing homes a rating of between one and five stars. A five-star designation means the facility ranks "much above average" compared to other facilities in its state, while a one-star designation means that a facility ranks "much below average" in the state. The rankings, which are updated monthly, are based on a nursing home's performance in three areas: quality measures, nurse staffing levels and health inspection reports.

The problem, according to the report, is that the rating scheme uses a quota system to rank facilities. Nursing homes that rank in the top 10 percent in health inspections in each state receive five-star ratings in that rating category, while facilities in the bottom 20 percent receive one-star ratings. This "grading on a curve" approach means that homes with serious deficiencies can still score high as long as their inspection records are better than most other homes in their state, while in another state a home with few problems could nevertheless receive a mediocre or poor rating.

Adding to the confusion is that the star ratings are heavily weighted by the health inspections, which are conducted by state surveyors and, according to the report, "vary considerably in scope and depth from state to state." The report points out that Massachusetts inspectors give nursing homes relatively few deficiency citations, resulting in "grade inflation" where the top 10 percent of homes would not necessarily be as outstanding as the top facilities in another state.

Disturbed by these issues, last year the attorneys general of 30 states sent a letter to CMS asking it to suspend and revise the rating system.

Nursing home consumer advocates appear conflicted about the rating system: on the one hand, they see it as a useful tool for consumers, but on the other they concede that it includes some four- and five-star homes that have been cited for negligence that resulted in deaths or injuries of patients.

According to the Commonwealth report, Edward F. Mortimer, technical director of the Survey and Certification Group for CMS, "says the star ratings should be only the starting point in the search for a nursing home, and he urged consumers to dig deeper into the information provided on the website and to visit homes in person."

Despite problems with the ratings of individual facilities, one overall trend that has emerged from the rating system is the general superiority of non-profit nursing homes compared with for-profit homes, the report points out.

To read the Commonwealth magazine report, "Misdiagnosis," click here.

 

As with any rating system, it should only be used as a guide.  Never substitute ratings for your own on site evaluation when researching long term care facilities.

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Previous Posts

. Part D Premiums to Remain Steady

“20 Common Nursing Home Problems”

Newsletter :Senior Moments" August 1, 2011

New AARP Study Shows Toll on Family Caregivers is “Huge”

Study Suggests that Grandparents are Safer Drivers than Parents

Depression in the Elderly

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HBO Program Dissects Oregon's Experience with the Death with Dignity Law

Virginia's Senior Navigator

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