A Kansas nursing home has lost its federal Medicare funding after
a state investigation revealed faulty practices led to widespread
coronavirus infection and 10 deaths.
(iStock)
tephen Crystal, director of the Center for Health Services Research
at the Rutgers Institute for Health, told Fox News that the move marks
CMS’ “ultimate penalty; decertifying a facility.”
“Most of the
time, they try very hard do other things before they go to that step
[like civil monetary penalties],” he said, adding “CMS actually doesn’t
do this very often, and one could argue that they haven't moved quickly
enough on other facilities that had out of control spread,” referencing
New Jersey and New York as examples.
In the case of the Kansas
facility, staff identified two symptomatic patients on Oct. 5 and
confirmed positive test results two days later but failed to separate
them from the rest of the residents.
“During this time, COVID-19 positive residents cohorted with COVID-19
negative residents, with only a curtain between them, against [Centers
for Disease and Prevention Control] guidelines and best practice to
prevent the spread of highly contagious COVID-19,” said the documents
obtained by Fox News. The facility also allowed communal dining for two
days after they discovered the symptomatic patients.
These failures, among others described in the report, ultimately exposed all 61 residents
to the virus, every single one testing positive, which led to one
hospitalization and 10 deaths. By Oct. 19, 37 staff members tested
positive.
Crystal wasn’t privy to all the details but upon a brief account said, "It sounds pretty egregious.”
The
facility’s administrator, Megan Mapes, received a notice of a 23-day
involuntary termination of the Medicare provider agreement: “We have
determined that Andbe Home, Inc. no longer meets the requirements for
participation as a skilled nursing facility in the Medicare program
under Title XVIII of the Social Security Act.”
These failures, among others described in the report, ultimately exposed all 61 residents to the virus.
(iStock)
The termination will go into effect Nov. 18, 2020.
CMS
informed Mapes that the Medicare program won’t pay for covered services
to patients admitted to the facility on or after Oct. 27, 2020.
Medicare will cover patients admitted before that date for up to 30 days
“to ensure residents are successfully relocated.”
The facility
was also notified that the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability
Services would assign management to Mission Health Communities to
temporarily manage staff, funds and facility procedures, among other
tasks, which went into effect Oct. 28.
If the facility decides to re-enter the Medicare program, it has to
assure its capabilities to comply with certification, due to the
“serious nature and circumstances of the involuntary termination.”
Further
review of the documents revealed the facility actually had a detailed
plan for potential coronavirus infection, but failed to follow it.
“My sense is that too much has been left up to the operators. The states need to go in, CMS needs to go in,” Crystal said.
Peter Pitts, former Food and Drug Administration associate
commissioner and president and co-founder of Center for Medicine in the
Public Interest, said to Fox News: “At best, it’s an oversight in
recognizing where sources need to be directed. At worst, it’s
negligence.”
While nursing homes operate on different sources of revenue, federal funding is clearly a large one, Pitts explained.
“Any facility that loses federal funding is going to be seriously impacted on the care that it can provide," Pitts said.
“The issue is that federal funding hasn’t trickled down to support
staff in nursing facilities and senior centers more broadly,” Pitts
said. “When you don’t properly compensate aides, versus physicians and
nurses and pharmacists, it’s not surprising that that’s where the
problems begin to arise.
"Hopefully these types of things can be
corrected before they result in massive wildfire of COVID-19 infection
in senior centers, as we had in New York early in the pandemic...Shame
on us if we wait for people to die before we address the problem."
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