By Dave Ress
Sen. Jennifer Kiggans, seen during the opening of Virginia's General Assembly on Jan. 8, said she'll keep pushing for new regulations of nursing homes. (Jonathon Gruenke/Daily Press) |
Brushing
off — for the 16th time — a proposal to set minimum staff levels for
Virginia nursing homes, which are ranked among the nation’s worst for
the number of patients per caregiver, a state Senate panel decided to
recommend a study group instead.
The
Senate Health subcommittee rejected on a voice vote a proposal from
state Sen. Jennifer Kiggans, R-Virginia Beach, that would have said
nursing homes need to provide at least one direct care staffer for every
six patients.
“Families
are stressed to the max trying to make sure their loved ones get the
care they need,” said Sam Kukich of Poquoson, after telling the panel
about her late mother-in-law’s 55 falls while in a Peninsula nursing home and the 65 pounds she lost there because she didn’t get the help she needed to eat.
Residents
who need help eating, showering, moving around and going to the
bathroom get an average of two hours of direct care staff time a day,
she said.
“A lot have given up,” she said.
Erin Hines, a certified nurse assistant from the Peninsula, said she often is assigned 20, 30 or 40 patients a shift.
“Call lights are going unanswered because there is no one to answer," she said.
But
Scott Johnson, a lobbyist for the state nursing home association, said
the bill wouldn’t help because it was a one-size-fits-all standard. He
said the real problem was that nursing homes have problems attracting
enough good staff members.
Subcommittee
Chairman Lynwood Lewis, D-Accomac, said the problem was serious but the
cost to address the issue could be large. And subcommittee member
Siobhan Dunnavant, R-Henrico, said that while nursing home shortfalls in
care are egregious, she thought Kiggans’ bill would do more harm than
good.
Kiggans said she would be back.
“These are my people,” she said, afterward. “This is why I ran for office.”
Most
Hampton Roads nursing homes have fewer nurses and aides and more
violations of health standards than the national averages, putting
patients at increased risk of injury or untreated illness, Daily Press
and Virginian-Pilot investigations found last year.
Inspectors
found multiple violations of state standards of care at virtually every
nursing home in Hampton Roads, a review of the latest round of reports
shows.
Out
of 64 area nursing homes, only two had no deficiencies in care
reported, the papers’ analysis of U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services records found.
Many
of the facilities where Hampton Roads’ most vulnerable adults live —
those often unable to feed themselves, move around or even speak —
exceed national averages for resident injuries from falls and open
wounds from lying too long in one position, the newspapers found after
reviewing several hundred pages of state inspection reports and federal
data.
Roughly
60 percent of Hampton Roads homes reported patients having open skin
wounds more often than the national average. The same percentage of
homes reported above average numbers of residents became less mobile
during their stay.
Since
2001, the U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services has said
homes needed to have enough registered nurses to provide 45 minutes of
care a day for each resident. Only 11 of Hampton Roads’ 57 homes met
this standard.
Full Article & Source:
Virginia lawmakers reject setting standards for nursing home staffing — for now
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