The longstanding battle between the nursing home industry and Gov. John Kasich has made its way to the Ohio Senate. But Statehouse correspondent Karen Kasler reports new data from Kasich’s office is reviving the fight over how to fund the state’s nursing homes.
Scoring below average
The report comes from the Scripps Gerontology Center at Ohio’s Miami University.
It shows in 2013, the quality of the state’s 962 nursing homes was
lower than the national average on 10 key measures. Those include the
percentage of patients suffering from falls, pain, weight loss and
mental-health related issues.
Peter Van Runkle speaks for the Ohio Health Care Association, the lobbying group for Ohio’s nursing homes.
“They
were using 2013 data. And when you look at the 2017 data, the current
data, there’s a different story on a number of those measures we are now
above the national average. These measures tend to move around some,”
Van Runkle says.
The year 2013 was three years after John Kasich
was elected governor and made a widely reported comment about special
interest groups – including the nursing home lobby – that he repeated
again in 2011:
“You get on the bus or we’re going to run you
over. Now they think they’re going to stop me, some of them. They think
they’re going to be able to carve out their little piece of pork. They
think they’re going to keep their snouts in that trough. If they do, you
lose,” Kasich said then.
Different statistics, different stories
Now
there are 930 nursing homes in Ohio. And Kasich’s office still has
concerns backed up by a release of data showing big problems continue
with them, especially larger facilities and those that operate
for-profit.
The spreadsheet from the Office of Health Transformation
shows smaller facilities get higher ratings, and most of those top
ratings are in the 64 percent of facilities that are non-profit. Greg
Moody is the director of the Office of Health Transformation, and says
there’s a way to improve those stats.
“Our objective is always to
reward the facilities that are providing the best quality.
Unfortunately, the way our current reimbursement system is set up in
statute, we pay the same price for the facilities that go the extra
distance and provide really good quality, we pay the same price for
those that have lower quality, too,” said Moody.
But Van Runkle disputes that.
“The
notion that all facilities are paid the same regardless of how they
perform on quality metrics is just inaccurate. In fact, there are in
statutes five specific quality measures that we have to meet.”
Lobbying for managed care
Van
Runkle is especially concerned about what the Kasich administration
wants to do, namely moving to private-sector managed-care plans for
Medicaid patients instead of what it calls a “one-size-fits-all
reimbursement."
“We find it really ironic that the same
administration that is pressing this message that we’re not up to snuff
is at the same time wanting to cut us and put us in managed care –
which, of course, managed-care plans have a financial incentive to pay
us less. Because the less that they pay providers, the more that goes to
their bottom line,” says Van Runkle.
But Moody said more than 20 states are trying this approach. He linked it to the state’s five-year pilot called MyCare Ohio, a managed-care program which covers about 100,000 Medicaid and Medicare recipients.
“We
have seen evidence that managed care works through our own MyCare
project here in Ohio. So the evidence is pretty clear that, in fact,
managed long term services and supports does improve clinical outcomes
for patients,” said Moody. “And it saves, ultimately, taxpayers, because
we’re talking about the Medicaid program here.”
The Kasich
administration’s plan was cut from the budget the House has passed, but
the Office of Health Transformation is hoping to lobby the Senate to
bring it back. The House also added $100 million to nursing homes, but
Van Runkle says there are still $135 million in cuts that weren’t
restored.
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Conflicting Data Revives the Battle Over How to Fund Ohio's Nursing Homes
I believe all nursing homes should be corporations (or private if small) as state nursing homes usually pay less and they're also harder to fight if a family needs to protect their parent from neglect.
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