Two New Jersey nursing homes now require more frequent
inspections because they've amassed too many health violations,
according to an update issued in late January by the Center for Medicare
and Medicaid Services, part of the U.S. Department of Health &
Human Services.
Mount Laurel Center for Rehab and Healthcare,
a 220-bed long term care facility in Mount Laurel, has been under
increased scrutiny for 14 months, yet remains on a list of places "that
have not improved," according to the report.
Meadow View Nursing & Respiratory Care in Williamstown, which has 180 beds, was added to the "Special Focus Facility" list two months ago.
"It's not a list you want to be on," said Mark Levine, a former nursing home administrator who now is a consultant in the industry. "It's the worst of the worst."
Nursing homes in the federal monitoring program have
unannounced inspections every three months, instead of every 12-18
months, Levine said. They stay on that schedule until they can prove
their progress is permanent.
If they don't get off the list, eventually they will be
kicked out of Medicaid and Medicare - a death knell for this kind of
business.
Most nursing homes will have some kind of "deficiency" noted
in an inspection - just as health inspectors typically find small
problems at restaurants, according to information provided by the
monitoring program. The Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services says
the average is 6-7 deficiencies.
But some places chronically have twice that number, bounce
in and out of compliance, or have problems that carry a higher risk of
harm to their residents. There are currently 86 nursing homes nationwide
that require extra scrutiny.
The two New Jersey facilities have very different reasons for being on the list.
Meadow View, the center just added to the program, gets very
low marks in the category of health inspections, yet maintains high
marks for its staffing levels. Most importantly, it has attained the
coveted five star Medicare rating for how patients fare there.
Those "quality measures" look at how many patients improve,
how many get bed sores or infections, and how many report being in pain,
among other things.
Those are important measures of patient health that can't be
faked or fudged, Levine said, who has served as a court- appointed
patient care ombudsman. By contrast, he said, the opinions of an
inspector are can be more subjective.
To get five stars in any category, as Meadow View has, a facility must be in the top 10 percent nationally, Levine said.
However, Meadow View got only one star for its health
inspection, which found many violations in building and kitchen
maintenance: cobwebs, peeling sheetrock, dusty ceiling vents, a filthy
microwave, and an emergency CPR cart stored behind "a large Christmas
tree, some boxes, an organ, 2 large televisions, a podium, and a row of
chairs."
Its report card meant it now has two stars on Medicare's "Nursing Home Compare" website.
The nursing home changed owners in late 2015, when it was
acquired by Genesis Health Care in Pennsylvania, a company that owns
nearly 500 health care facilities in 34 states.
Many of the problems occurred under previous ownership, said
a Genesis spokeswoman. Since it takes two years for older inspections
to drop out of the federal calculation, the current report "is not an
accurate reflection of the care provided at Meadow View today," the
spokeswoman said.
The facility has hired a new executive director and nurse executive since the acquisition, the spokeswoman said.
Full Article & Source:
2 N.J. nursing homes put on notice to improve care
If the nursing homes don't improve, then they need to follow through with their threats to close down the funding and that will send a message to other nursing homes that care is the #1 issue.
ReplyDeletePutting them on notice doesn't really bother them like a stiff fine.
ReplyDelete