Biden seeks minimum staff levels at US nursing homes
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[September 02, 2023]
WASHINGTON
(Reuters) - President Joe Biden's administration on Friday proposed
setting federal minimum staffing levels for nursing homes, a move aimed
at addressing longtime complaints about abuse and neglect in the
industry that were highlighted during the COVID-19 pandemic.
THE TAKE: Biden, a Democrat, pledged last year to protect American
seniors' lives and life savings by cracking down on nursing homes that
commit fraud or endanger patients' safety and address the chronic
understaffing at long-term care facilities that was exposed during the
pandemic.
BY THE NUMBERS: The nursing home industry takes in nearly $100 billion a
year from U.S. taxpayers, yet many understaff their facilities, the
White House said. The new rule proposes that facilities have a
registered nurse (RN) on site around the clock. It says each resident
should receive 2.45 hours (two hours and 27 minutes) of care from a
nurse aide every day, plus at least 33 minutes of care from an
registered nurse every day.
A nursing home would need two registered nurses for each eight hour
shift and 10 nurse aids per eight-hour shift, the White House said. To
meet the requirements, 68% of nursing homes would have to hire nurse
aides and 36% of nursing homes would have to hire RNs, it said.
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People hold a memorial and a candlelight
vigil honoring those that have died of the coronavirus disease
(COVID-19) in nursing homes one year after the March 25, 2020
executive order by New York Governor Andrew Cuomo in which nursing
homes in New York state were forced to take in untested patients, in
Foley Square in the Manhattan borough of New York City, New York,
U.S., March 25, 2021. REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz/File photo
CONTEXT: During the pandemic, more
than 200,000 nursing home residents and workers died, accounting for
one-fifth of all COVID deaths in the country, the White House said
in a fact sheet on the proposed changes. Staffing shortages, it
said, may force nursing home residents to go without basic
necessities like hot meals and regular baths, or even lie in wet and
soiled diapers for hours. They also may suffer more falls and
bedsores.
(Reporting by Doina Chiacu; Editing by Daniel Wallis)
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