Report: Nursing homes in crisis with staff shortages
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[October 14, 2021]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – A new report released
Wednesday says staffing shortages at nursing homes in Illinois have
reached crisis proportions and that people of color are most at risk of
suffering the consequences.
That’s because those individuals are more likely to live in understaffed
facilities or in “ward” rooms with three or four beds per room, the
report notes, a fact that became tragically evident during the COVID-19
pandemic when Black and brown Medicaid patients in nursing homes were 40
percent more likely to die of the disease than white patients.
The report by the Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family Services
calls for a dramatic overhaul in the way the state Medicaid program
reimburses nursing homes to reward those that improve their staffing
levels and quality of care.
“This is not a report that can sit on a shelf and collect dust,” Kelly
Cunningham, DHFS’s deputy director for long-term care, told a
legislative panel Wednesday. “The need to take action is now. The issues
we're dealing with are urgent. Continuation of the status quo is not
acceptable. And we must hold long-term care providers across Illinois to
a higher standard.”
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The agency is proposing a $345 million increase in nursing home
reimbursement rates, with increases tied to a facility’s staffing and
other quality and safety improvements. That money would come from a
combination of streamlining billing procedures and an increase in a tax
the state levies on each nursing facility occupied bed in the state, a
pool of money that also draws additional federal Medicaid
reimbursements.
That would translate to an average payment rate increase of about 13
percent, although the amount for any given facility would vary. Funding
increases would be based on a formula that also takes a facility’s
profit margin into account so that profitable nursing homes that do not
adequately staff their facilities would not see their reimbursements
increase on par with those that do.
The report notes that Illinois spends billions of dollars each year on
nursing facility care for roughly 45,000 Medicaid patients, but the
state consistently ranks last in the nation for staffing, as measured by
the national Staff Time and Resource Intensity Verification, or STRIVE
Project. In fact, Illinois accounts for 47 of the 100 most understaffed
facilities in the nation when comparing actual staffing levels against
their STRIVE target levels.
Andy Allison, DHFS’s deputy director for strategic planning and
analytics, said those shortages had tragic consequences during the
COVID-19 pandemic.
“Imagine ourselves in the year or two prior to COVID, and if we had
known it was coming, whether we would have considered resident safety,
room crowding, and staffing to have been urgent issues,” he said. “We
lost – this is hard for me – thousands in our nursing homes. I don't
think there's anyone in the country who would not at that point have
said, this is urgent. And I think the point is nothing has changed,
except that now we know just how bad it can be.”
Allison also said increased funding alone will not solve the staffing
shortage in nursing homes. He said the industry itself also needs to
make fundamental changes to address its workforce challenges.
“We are in a an urgent race to strengthen that labor market – not to
capture them, but to entice them to stay in the serving profession that
they've chosen,” he said. “And one of the ways to do that is to make it
more of a profession, to give it a pay scale, to allow for promotion, to
provide a payoff to staying with it, which is actually one of the
principal policy objectives that HFS, the department, has had for years,
which is consistency of the relationship between a staff and the
residents that they serve.”
The recommendations came as welcome news for some in the nursing home
industry.
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A graphic from the Department of Healthcare and
Family Services' Comprehensive Review of Nursing Home Payment with
Recommendations for Reform report shows that 47 of the 100
lowest-staffed homes in the U.S. are located in Illinois. (Credit:
Department of Healthcare and Family Services)
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Angela Schnepf, executive vice president of
LeadingAge Illinois, an association of nonprofit aging service
providers, said the policy changes DHFS recommend are long overdue
and should have been part of the plan when Illinois first adopted
its nursing home assessment in 2011.
“As many of you know, 10 years ago, the General
Assembly by a thin margin passed the bed tax for a $105 million
increase to support the staffing ratios passed in the spring of
2010,” she said. “The rate increase funded the status quo with an
assumption that understaffed nursing homes would apply the money to
increase their number of staff. One would have thought this made
sense. However, the data shows that did not happen.”
Schnepf went on to say that a survey of nursing homes just before
the pandemic showed that the 120 facilities with the lowest staffing
levels had actually reduced their staffing hours per resident day by
5.8 percent since 2010, the year before the assessment went into
effect, while the statewide average for all nursing homes in the
state increased 4.5 percent.
“As you may or may not know, LeadingAge Illinois opposed the bed tax
in 2011 because we anticipated the tax would shift money from
well-staffed nursing homes to the pockets of owners of understaffed
nursing homes because of the zero requirement of accountability to
apply the new money to increasing their staff,” she said. “As a
result, over 40 percent of Illinois nursing homes were losers or
lost money, and over 60 percent of our LeadingAge Illinois members
were losers. That means good providers bore the tax burden to fund
the failed attempt to increase staffing in understaffed nursing
homes, all to no avail.”
But Matt Pickering, executive director of the Health Care Council of
Illinois, which represents for-profit nursing homes, criticized the
plan for reinforcing what he called a “punitive relationship” and
called for an across-the-board rate increase, especially for those
with high percentages of low-income residents.
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“These facilities face the most challenges to providing care due to
the state paying among the lowest Medicaid reimbursement rates in
the country,” he said. “We must prioritize quality health care for
low-income residents and not jeopardize the stability of our
long-term system.”
Wednesday’s hearing before a joint meeting of four health
care-related House committees was for informational purposes only,
and no action was taken.
Rep. Camille Lilly, D-Chicago, who chairs the Appropriations-Human
Services Committee, called the recommendations “only the first step”
toward improving the quality of care for Illinois seniors, and she
said there would be more joint hearings in the future.
“This first step does not dictate that we're going to have quality
services in these nursing homes,” she said. “It does improve some of
the staffing issues. But it does not mean we're going to change the
quality until we change the mindsets of those who are working in
this facilities and why they are there.”
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan
news service covering state government and distributed to more than
400 newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois
Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. |