Dino and Lillian Palermo |
Lillian
Palermo tried to prepare for the worst possibilities of aging. An
insurance executive with a Ph.D. in psychology and a love of ballroom
dancing, she arranged for her power of attorney and health care proxy to
go to her husband, Dino, eight years her junior, if she became
incapacitated. And in her 80s, she did.
Mr.
Palermo, who was the lead singer in a Midtown nightclub in the 1960s
when her elegant tango first caught his eye, now regularly rolls his
wife’s wheelchair to the piano at the Catholic nursing home in Manhattan
where she ended up in 2010 as dementia, falls and surgical
complications took their toll. He sings her favorite songs, feeds her
home-cooked Italian food, and pays a private aide to be there when he
cannot.
But one day last summer, after he disputed nursing home bills that had suddenly doubled Mrs. Palermo’s copays, and complained about inexperienced employees who dropped his wife on the floor, Mr. Palermo was shocked to find a six-page legal document waiting on her bed.
It
was a guardianship petition filed by the nursing home, Mary Manning
Walsh, asking the court to give a stranger full legal power over Mrs.
Palermo, now 90, and complete control of her money.
Few
people are aware that a nursing home can take such a step. Guardianship
cases are difficult to gain access to and poorly tracked by New York
State courts; cases are often closed from public view for
confidentiality. But the Palermo case is no aberration. Interviews with
veterans of the system and a review of guardianship court data conducted
by researchers at Hunter College at the request of The New York Times
show the practice has become routine, underscoring the growing power
nursing homes wield over residents and families amid changes in the
financing of long-term care.
In
a random, anonymized sample of 700 guardianship cases filed in
Manhattan over a decade, Hunter College researchers found more than 12
percent were brought by nursing homes. Some of these may have been
prompted by family feuds, suspected embezzlement or just the absence of
relatives to help secure Medicaid
coverage. But lawyers and others versed in the guardianship process
agree that nursing homes primarily use such petitions as a means of bill
collection — a purpose never intended by the Legislature when it
enacted the guardianship statute in 1993.
At
least one judge has ruled that the tactic by nursing homes is an abuse
of the law, but the petitions, even if they are ultimately unsuccessful,
force families into costly legal ordeals.
“It’s a strategic move to intimidate,” said Ginalisa Monterroso, who handled patient Medicaid accounts at the Mary Manning Walsh Nursing Home until 2012, and is now chief executive of Medicaid Advisory Group, an elder care counseling business that was representing Mr. Palermo in his billing dispute. “Nursing homes do it just to bring money.”
“It’s so cruel,” she added. “Mr. Palermo loves his wife, he’s there every single day, and they just threw him to the courts.”
Brett
D. Nussbaum, a lawyer who represents Mary Manning Walsh and many other
nursing homes, said Mr. Palermo’s devotion to his wife was irrelevant to
the decision to seek a court-appointed guardian in July, when the
billing dispute over his wife’s care reached a stalemate, with an
outstanding balance approaching $68,000.
“The
Palermo case is no different than any other nursing home bill that they
had difficulty collecting,” Mr. Nussbaum said, estimating that he had
brought 5,000 guardianship cases himself in 21 years of practice. “When
you have families that do not cooperate and an incapacitated person,
guardianship is a legitimate means to get the nursing home paid.”
Guardianship
transfers a person’s legal rights to make some or all decisions to
someone appointed by the court — usually a lawyer paid with the ward’s
money. It is aimed at protecting people unable to manage their affairs
because of incapacity, and who lack effective help without court action.
Legally, it can supplant a power of attorney and a health care proxy.
Although
it is a drastic measure, nursing home lawyers argue that using
guardianship to secure payment for care is better than suing an
incapacitated resident who cannot respond.
Mr.
Palermo, 82, was devastated by the petition, brought in the name of
Sister Sean William, the Carmelite nun who is the executive director of
Mary Manning Walsh. “It’s like a hell,” he said last fall, speaking in
the cadences of the southern Italian village where he grew up in poverty
in a family of eight. “Never in my life I was sued for anything. I just
want to take care of my wife.”
A
court evaluator eventually reported that Mr. Palermo was the
appropriate guardian, and questioned why the petition had been filed.
But the matter still dragged on, and Mr. Palermo, who had promised to
pay any arrears once Medicaid completed a recalculation of the bill,
grew distraught as his expenses fighting the case reached $10,000.
In
the end, Medicaid’s recalculation put his wife’s monthly copay at
$4,558.54, almost $600 less than the nursing home had claimed, but still
far more than the $2,642 Mr. Palermo had been paying under an earlier
Medicaid calculation. As soon as the nursing home cashed his check for
the outstanding balance, it withdrew the guardianship petition.
“They
chose to use a strong-arm method, asking for somebody to be appointed
to take over her funds, hoping for a rubber stamp to do their wishes,”
said Elliott Polland, Mr. Palermo’s lawyer.
Many
judges go along with such petitions, according to lawyers and others
involved in the process. One judge who has not is Alexander W. Hunter
Jr., a longtime State Supreme Court justice in the Bronx and Manhattan.
In guardianship cases in 2006 and 2007, Justice Hunter ordered the
nursing homes to bear the legal costs, ruling they had brought the
petitions solely for the purpose of being paid and stating that this was
not the Legislature’s intent when it enacted the statute, known as
Article 81 of the Mental Hygiene Law. (Continue Reading)
Full Article & Source:
To Collect Debts, Nursing Homes Are Seizing Control Over Patients
I am so glad to see this exposed. Nursing homes do it, hospitals do it, lawyers do it. And people suffer because judges rubber stamp it.
ReplyDelete12% of 700 guardianships in NY were brought by nursing homes?
ReplyDeleteI hope the legislature is working on this. It's shocking and very scary.
What gets me is you know darn good and well that the judges involved in these cases knew the guardianship was for the nursing home and went right ahead and rubberstamped it anyway.
ReplyDeleteThey should look through those cases and discipline the judges.