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Tuesday, Jun 4 2019

Full Issue

Senators Release Names Of Nearly 400 Nursing Homes With 'Persistent Record Of Poor Care' That Are Not Publicly Identified

The list was provided by CMS and released by Pennsylvania Sens. Bob Casey and Pat Toomey. The 400 facilities have similar problems to a small list released by the government, but these were withheld from the public. "We've got to make sure any family member or any potential resident of a nursing home can get this information, not only ahead of time but on an ongoing basis," Casey, a Democrat, and Toomey, a Republican, said in their report.

The federal government for years has kept under wraps the names of hundreds of nursing homes around the country found by inspectors to have serious ongoing health, safety or sanitary problems. Nearly 400 facilities nationwide had a "persistent record of poor care" as of April, but they were not included along with a shorter list of homes that get increased federal scrutiny and do have warning labels, according to a Senate report released Monday. (Alonso-Zaldivar, 6/3)

Among the facilities on a list the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services provided is a Texas nursing home whose management allegedly failed to fix a waste system backup. Staff continued to serve food from the kitchen, the report says, despite a聽foul-smelling black substance coming聽through the drains聽and "seeping into the kitchen floor."聽 鈥淲hen a family makes the hard decision to seek nursing home services for a loved one, they deserve to know if a facility under consideration suffers from systemic shortcomings,鈥澛爏aid Sen. Pat Toomey, R-Pa., who along with Sen. Bob Casey, D-Pa.,聽issued the report聽 (Lam, 6/3)

Sixteen Pennsylvania nursing homes are among a previously-undisclosed federal list of some of the worst nursing homes in the nation. The national list of 395 homes was released Monday by Pa. Senators Bob Casey Jr. and Pat Toomey as part of an investigation by the senators into aspects of federal oversight of nursing homes. Their investigation follows years of media reports of poor care in America鈥檚 nursing homes, including a 2016 PennLive series on chronic problems in Pennsylvania facilities and a follow-up 2018 investigation. (Simmons-Ritchie, 6/3)

A half dozen Hawaii care centers have made the list of worst performing nursing homes in the state. The federal government recently released a list of facilities with a documented pattern of poor care, which is why six Hawaii nursing homes are now getting extra scrutiny. Many of Hawaii's aging population are being cared for at dozens of nursing facilities around the state. Each is regularly inspected by the Department of Health, but the news is not always good. (Drewes, 6/3)

After looking through the list, we found both Twin River Nursing and Rehabilitation Center in Owensboro, and Signature Healthcare of Newburgh on the list. Federal data shows Twin Rivers had 15 health citations during their last health inspection in September and Signature Healthcare had 34 during their last inspection, which was in April of 2018. The average number of health citations nationwide is 7.9 according to medicare.gov.Federal officials say they鈥檙e evaluating if they can legally release the list. (DeVault, 6/3)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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