In 2015, Ellen Paule, 79, of Belleville was admitted to St.
Paul’s Nursing Home in Belleville. Within two months, a wound on her
heel deteriorated to the point that live larvae and maggots were found
crawling inside it.
Paule was hospitalized
on June 28 with “a wound infection and maggot infestation,” according to
reports from the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid. Another
resident reported that the dressing on Paule’s leg ulcer would at times
go two or three days without being changed.
Paule died two years later in April 2017. Efforts to reach her family for comment were unsuccessful.
The facility, which is owned by Integrity Healthcare, was fined $25,000 and issued a severe violation by IDPH.
St. Paul’s executive director, Tammy von Yeast, said via email she could not comment on Paule's case because she is prohibited from providing information regarding residents' care and treatment.
An Integrity Healthcare representative also said she could not comment on specific cases due to privacy laws.
The citations issued to
St. Paul and Midwest Respiratory and Rehab are just a few of hundreds
issued to metro-east nursing homes in the past three years. It and many
other local nursing homes have been issued violations at a rate that far
exceeds state and federal levels.
Nursing homes across
the state, and especially in the metro-east, appear to be struggling to
provide quality care. Critics say this is possibly due to inadequate
government reimbursement or perhaps a failure to invest enough in
staffing and patient care.
Local facilities have
been issued numerous violations for neglect, bedsores, failure to
investigate residents’ injuries and other issues.
Others, however, blame
Illinois’ privatized Medicare and Medicaid system, from which medical
reimbursements arrive months late and are often too low to cover costs.
Facility representatives say a backlog in reimbursements from Managed
Care Organizations, health insurance corporations who control Illinois
Medicare payments, are causing a crisis for facilities.
Whatever the cause,
state and federal data shows metro-east nursing homes are facing a
problem with violations issued on the state and federal level.
▪ Thirteen out of St. Clair County’s 18 nursing homes score “below average” in overall care, including Midwest Rehab, according to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. Four of those have a rating of "much below average."
▪ In the past three inspection cycles, five of Belleville’s nursing homes have received a total of 260 federal violations, for an average of 17.3 health violations per home each inspection. This is more than double the state average of 6.2 per inspection and more than triple the national average of 5.8, according to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.
Columbia-based lawyer
Steve Buser, who has worked in the metro-east for 40 years, said each
year he works on 10 to 15 cases alleging nursing home neglect, abuse or
improper deaths. However, he noted he receives requests for about 10
times that amount.
A pattern of neglect
Buser serves clients
throughout Missouri and Illinois, but said most of his nursing home
cases come from St. Clair and Madison counties.
Nursing homes can receive violations on the state and federal level and are inspected at least once every six to 15 months.
Federal inspections,
organized by CMS, issue 12 levels of violations. The level depends on
the amount of harm caused and the number of people potentially or
actually harmed.
An “A” violation, for
example, means there was the potential for minimal harm for a very small
number of people. An “L” violation, the most severe a home can receive,
means there was widespread, immediate jeopardy to residents’ health or
safety.
The Illinois Department of Public Health also issues violations to homes based on CMS inspections and range in severity.
Since November 2014,
only 28 L violations have been given by the state. Eight of those
violations, 28.6 percent overall, were given to metro-east nursing
homes. Seven were issued in St. Clair County alone, according to CMS.
When a violation is
issued, an agency can fine the home up to $25,000 per offense depending
on its severity. CMS can revoke a home’s Medicare and Medicaid
reimbursement if they see fit.
Some violations, such
as four issued against Cahokia’s Autumn Meadows, were based around a
specific incident. In July 2016, the home received multiple “L”
violations when a fire broke out in the home. IDPH claims staff did not
have an adequate emergency plan in place for patients. Autumn Meadows
representatives disagree and say they are appealing the violations.
Other severe violations in the area indicate a pattern of neglect and endangerment of patients.
For example, Integrity
Healthcare in Wood River was issued a violation after a patient was sent
to the hospital in a coma on Christmas with a 104.1 degree fever and
sepsis. The man had been unresponsive for five days prior to his
hospitalization, according to the report, and the facility had failed to
“recognize, assess and treat” the man’s condition.
Data shows many homes
are not issued a violation just once, but instead are repeatedly given
citations for the same problems over and over again.
All deficiency data used in this story is based on 2015 to 2017 CMS reports available as of April 1, 2018.
At Cahokia’s Autumn
Meadows, 9 of the 13 violations issued in 2017 were repeat violations,
such as keeping residents free from physical restraints.
Jeff Davis, the
director of operations of Southwest Healthcare Management, which owns
Autumn Meadows, said repeat violations do not necessarily indicate the
exact problem is recurring. In some cases, he said, a new violation may
differ from a previous one but still fall under the same code because
the categories are so broad.
“We may have corrected
part of the problem but not all the aspects of it,” he said. “We have
systems designed to prevent any violations that we have here, and
sometimes those things need to be improved upon and they’re called out
by state violations. We always take steps to re-mediate those.”
Integrity Healthcare in
Belleville was issued four citations in two years for not providing
care that ensured the highest well-being of each resident. Within an
overlapping 15-month period, the facility was cited four times for not
preventing avoidable accidents or protecting against accident hazards.
One of these violations
in 2015 resulted in the hospitalization and severe injury of a resident
whose tracheostomy tube was ripped out because he was moved improperly.
Full Article & Source:
The metro-east has some of Illinois' worst nursing homes, data says. Here's why.
Full Article & Source:
The metro-east has some of Illinois' worst nursing homes, data says. Here's why.
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