| 
		New law provides $700 million for nursing home staffing
		 Send a link to a friend 
		[June 01, 2022] By 
		PETER HANCOCKCapitol News Illinois
 phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
 
 
  SPRINGFIELD – Gov. JB Pritzker signed 
		legislation Tuesday that will pump an additional $700 million annually 
		into Medicaid-funded nursing homes, provided they use that money to 
		increase staff and wages in their facilities. 
 “This is truly a game changer,” Pritzker said at a bill signing ceremony 
		at a Chicago-area nursing home. “… Together we've delivered a victory 
		for the communities of residents that you serve.”
 
 The payment reform bill, spelled out in a Senate amendment to House Bill 
		246, is among the first of its kind in the nation, according to 
		Department of Healthcare and Family Services officials. It passed 
		unanimously out of both chambers of the General Assembly, but only after 
		nearly two years of negotiations between the administration and the 
		nursing home industry — negotiations that at times appeared to reach an 
		impasse.
 
 “I’m just I so proud for this administration and this team that we've 
		been able to accomplish this. I don't think anybody really understands 
		how big of a lift this was, and how much of a change it is,” HFS 
		Director Theresa Eagleson said during a recent interview.
 
 
		
		 
		The Illinois Medicaid program pays for the care of about 70 percent of 
		all the nursing home residents in the state, or roughly 45,000 seniors 
		and disabled individuals.
 
 For years, though, there have been concerns about the quality of care 
		those people receive. HFS officials have cited studies showing Illinois 
		has more understaffed nursing homes by far than any other state, a 
		problem driven by high turnover rates and low wages.
 
 That problem became especially acute during the COVID-19 pandemic when 
		nursing homes became the source of multiple outbreaks and accounted for 
		a disproportionate number of COVID-related deaths.
 
 “We know that almost half of all COVID-19 related deaths occurred in our 
		nursing homes at the beginning of the pandemic,” said Rep. Anna Moeller, 
		D-Elgin, the bill’s lead sponsor in the House. “And we've heard tragic 
		stories of overcrowding and understaffing that happens in far too many 
		nursing homes, especially in homes located in Black and Latino 
		communities. We learned how COVID-19 only exacerbated an already 
		chronically bad situation.”
 
 Sen. Ann Gillespie, D-Arlington Heights, who carried the bill in the 
		Senate, said that even before the pandemic, many for-profit nursing 
		facilities were reporting profits even as they operated with staffing 
		levels below clinical requirements.
 
 [to top of second column]
 | 
            
			 
            
			Gov. JB Pritzker signs legislation providing $700 
			million in new annual funding for nursing homes to improve staffing 
			levels and quality of care. (Credit: Blueroomstream.com) 
            
			
			
			 
		“The data showed long-term care facilities in predominantly Black and 
		Latino communities had among the lowest staffing levels,” she said. “And 
		while the situation worsened during the pandemic, the data was clear 
		that this has been happening well before the pandemic ever started.”
 The estimated $700 million in new annual funding is split evenly between 
		state and federal funds. Most of the state’s portion comes through an 
		increase in the state’s nursing home bed tax, which is used to draw down 
		additional federal dollars.
 
		Under the law, nursing homes can qualify for higher payment rates as 
		they hire additional staff to reach certain target levels. The law also 
		establishes new reimbursement rates for services provided by certified 
		nursing assistants, or CNAs, providing them with wage increases based on 
		their years of experience in the profession, rather than their tenure at 
		the specific facility where they work.
 The new law also requires more disclosure about the ownership of nursing 
		homes, something that HFS officials said is needed, particularly with 
		for-profit nursing homes. It was also a provision meant to address 
		concerns among nursing home owners that the new payment model could 
		force some nursing homes to close their doors.
 
 “You cannot measure profit if you don't know who owns a facility,” HFS 
		deputy director Andy Allison said in a recent interview. “Profit, net 
		and loss, is a function of the definition of the business that you're 
		describing. And you can't define a business if you can't define its 
		ownership, and in particular, common ownership across nursing homes. So 
		the fundamental question of viability, access and serving our customers 
		depends on knowing who owns what.”
 
 
		
		 
		The new rules still need approval from the federal Centers for Medicare 
		and Medicaid Services, but Eagleson said she is confident of getting 
		that approval.
 
 “They actually came out and talked to us and were asking us how we can 
		help other states move in this direction,” she said.
 
		
		Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news 
		service covering state government that is distributed to more than 400 
		newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press 
		Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. |