FROM THE FOUNDATION

The Social Life of Health Information

A new Pew Internet/CHCF national survey finds the Internet has joined doctors and family members as one of the top three ways people search for answer to their health care questions.

Mapping Physician Supply in California

This report presents the first comprehensive study of the Medical Board of California survey data on practicing physicians in the state. It finds fewer M.D.s than previously estimated and a wide variation in supply among counties.

Restructuring Options for Community Clinics

Concerned about their long-term survival, some California community clinics are considering partnerships or mergers. This issue brief offers a roadmap for restructuring.

Medi-Cal

Thursday, May 15, 2008

Federal Report Finds Lapses in State Nursing Home Inspections

State nursing home inspectors miss or minimize deficiencies -- such as malnutrition, severe bedsores, overuse of medications and abuse -- that pose a serious, immediate threat to patients, according to a report scheduled for release on Thursday by the Government Accountability Office, the New York Times reports.

State inspectors visit most nursing homes once annually under contract with the federal government, which imposes standards on the facilities. Nursing homes must meet federal standards to participate in Medicare and Medicaid.

Federal officials in some cases accompany state inspectors to nursing homes or make subsequent visits to the facilities within a few weeks to check the results of the inspections.

According to the report, from 2002 to 2007, federal officials found that state inspectors had missed at least one serious deficiency at nursing homes in 15% of the inspections they checked. In nine states -- Alabama, Arizona, Missouri, New Mexico, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee and Wyoming -- federal officials found that state inspectors had missed at least one serious deficiency at nursing homes in 25% of the inspections they checked, the report found.

"Poor quality of care -- worsening pressure sores or untreated weight loss -- in a small but unacceptably high number of nursing homes continues to harm residents or place them in immediate jeopardy, that is, at risk of death or serious injury," according to the report.

Vincent Ventimiglia, an assistant secretary of HHS, said in written comments on the report, "We fully endorse and will implement all the GAO recommendations."

Bill

GAO compiled the report at the request of Sens. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) and Herb Kohl (D-Wis.), who have introduced a bill that seeks to improve nursing home care. The legislation, which the senators hope to attach to a Medicare bill, would increase fines for violations of federal standards at nursing homes.

Under the bill, nursing homes would have to pay $25,000 for serious deficiencies, compared with $10,000 currently, and $100,000 for serious deficiencies that result in the deaths of patients. In addition, the legislation would require nursing homes to provide consumers and the government with more information about ownership and "affiliated or related parties."

A number of consumer groups support the bill (Pear, New York Times, 5/15).



Readers are invited to send feedback to: chl@chcf.org