The nursing home’s linen room reeked of urine. Some residents’ rooms
were so grimy, a state inspector’s shoe came off when it stuck to the
floor, according to a report investigators filed in May about the Twin
Oaks Center in Danvers.
At the Maplewood Center in Amesbury,
administrators in May acknowledged to inspectors that they were so short
of certified nursing assistants, they had to use an activities director
and an admissions executive to help feed patients.
In November, administrators at Meadow View Center in North Reading
agreed to pay a $56,000 federal fine after a resident with a high fever,
“delirious, and talking about monsters,” died from massive inflammation
following an untreated urinary tract infection, according to a state
report.
The three nursing homes are owned by Genesis HealthCare, a
Pennsylvania company that has grown into a behemoth in the past four
years, more than doubling in size, to become the largest owner of
nursing homes in Massachusetts and nationwide. Genesis, which as of July
was partly owned by a private equity firm, counts nearly 500 nursing
homes, including 32 in Massachusetts, in its portfolio.
But with rapid expansion has come an erosion in quality of care, federal
and state data show. Nearly half of the nursing homes owned by Genesis
have seen their ratings by federal regulators decline since 2010, a
Globe analysis shows. And most of those whose ratings remained the same
were ranked as below average in quality.
At the same time, health and safety problems have climbed. Federal
regulators assign a score to each nursing home based on the severity and
extent of problems discovered in facilities. A Globe analysis of those
numbers found that Genesis homes had strikingly worse scores than the
state as a whole.
The analysis suggests that problems at Genesis
facilities worsened over time, and by early this year, the score for
Genesis homes was twice as bad as the statewide number.
In a statement issued to the Globe, Genesis said it is “committed to
providing quality care to each and every patient in the centers it owns
and operates across the United States.”
The statement, which did not address specific questions about the company or the Globe’s findings, acknowledged some hurdles.
“The
integration of centers, and the improvement of quality and performance
in an incredibly difficult operating environment, is a challenging and
long-term effort,” the statement said.
The Genesis experience
underscores the growing turbulence in an industry that cares for some of
the nation’s most frail residents. Across the country, nursing homes
are being bought and sold at a rapid pace, analysts say, as companies
vie for facilities that attract more higher-paying patients.
This
year alone, companies have notified Massachusetts regulators about plans
to sell 58 nursing homes. That’s 14 percent of the state’s roughly 400
nursing homes.
Just a few years ago, Genesis nursing homes were
considered to be respected long-term care facilities, say lawyers who
routinely field calls from distraught families about nursing home
injuries and deaths.
That has changed.
“Now, I get a lot of calls on Genesis,” said David Hoey, a North Reading attorney who specializes in nursing home-related cases.
Hoey
said the problems reported by families, such as pressure sores and
broken bones from falls, are typically seen when nursing homes do not
have enough staff to monitor and care for residents.
Hoey said his
office has litigated about a half-dozen cases involving Genesis homes
in the past few years. But he said he could not discuss specific cases
because Genesis, reflecting widespread industry practice, typically
requires confidentiality agreements in legal settlements with families,
barring them or their lawyers from discussing a case.
Saul Gruber,
a New Jersey lawyer and executive board member of the Nursing Home
Trial Lawyers Association, reports similar experiences with Genesis.
“We
have seen more abuse cases, more cases that simply come from not paying
attention, and not watching the resident, which is surprising for
Genesis,” Gruber said.
“In the past couple of years, people are
choking and dying because someone allowed them to have food they weren’t
supposed to. Who does that, unless you are understaffed?” Gruber said.
Staffing
shortages in nursing homes are not unusual. But the Globe analysis
found more pronounced gaps in nurse staffing levels in Genesis homes in
Massachusetts compared with median levels statewide.
Federal data
for this year show registered nurses at Genesis homes spend roughly 19
percent less time caring for patients than federal regulators expected,
based on the severity of patient illnesses. Nursing assistants spent 14
percent less time.
However, Genesis licensed practical nurses —
who provide more specialized care than nursing assistants but less than
RNs — spent more time than expected.
The Globe analyzed data
collected by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, the
federal agency that regulates nursing homes. The data included
information about health and safety problems uncovered at each
Massachusetts nursing home and nurse staffing levels.
That
information was used to compare the performance of Genesis homes with
others statewide, a methodology suggested by university researchers. (Click to continue reading)
Full Article & Source:
A nursing home giant stumbles amid expansion
1 comment:
Stumbles? I think it's alot more than a stumble.
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