Ohio’s nursing homes are dumping patients at homeless shelters
[April 14, 2026]
By JAKE ZUCKERMAN/Signal Ohio
The scene was concerning enough to prompt the homeless shelter staff to
call the fire department.
A woman using a walker had shown up, incontinent and carrying “a large
bag of medications.” She was diabetic, managing a tibia fracture and
alcohol-related dementia, and she was “dumped” at the shelter, according
to federal inspectors.
“The staff member (said) Resident #83 was unclear of what was going on,
scared, and not sure who dropped her off there,” inspectors for the
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, which funds most nursing
home care in the U.S., wrote after an Aug. 3, 2023 inspection.
The incident was what industry experts described as a rare but
increasingly common instance of a nursing home in Ohio transferring its
patients – who are often older, poorer and medically fragile – to a
homeless shelter.
CMS has faulted Eastland and six others in the past few years related to
efforts to discharge patients to homeless shelters, most of which were
ultimately carried out.

The woman had been caught drinking beer at her residence in the Eastland
Rehabilitation and Nursing Center, in Columbus, prompting an involuntary
discharge. Staff tried to get her into rehabilitation for substance use,
but no beds were immediately available.
Eastland staff never called the county’s psychiatric bed board to find a
spot for the woman, according to the inspectors. Instead, they took her
to the shelter. There, about 100 people sat ahead of her on the waiting
list.
The shelter at first declined to admit the woman, leaving her outside in
the late-summer heat. Staff eventually relented, letting her sit in the
lobby with a glass of cold water while they summoned a city rapid
response team, including the fire department and a social worker.
Neither Eastland nor the CMS inspectors could locate the woman by the
time the report was published.
“In addition, the events of what occurred at the addiction recovery
center or how/why Resident #83 ended up at the homeless shelter … could
not be determined as the facility was unable to provide any additional
information regarding Resident #83,” the inspection report states.
The administrator at Eastland declined to return phone calls about the
inspection. Facility staff declined to provide contact information for
Garden Healthcare, the corporate owner of the nursing home, which
operates five other facilities, according to CMS data. It doesn’t
publish any contact information online.
An increasingly common occurrence
Most of the patients in these situations are older, homeless, unemployed
and lack support networks of family or friends that might be checking in
on them, according to Chip Wilkins, who leads the city of Dayton’s Long
Term Care Ombudsman program, which acts as a legal advocate for long
term care patients.
“We are starting to deal with it more and more. The facilities are so
closely monitored on discharges, but yet they still try and send them to
hospitals and not take them back. Or drop them off at homeless
shelters,” he said in an interview.

“I would say certainly over the last six months there has been an
uptick.”
Leilani Pelletier, the statewide ombudsman, said she didn’t have ready
access to data that could confirm whether the discharges to homeless
shelters have increased in frequency statewide.
But health care is as subject to macroeconomic forces like inflation as
other sectors of the economy. And Medicaid, which pays for most nursing
care, is under increasing cost pressure as federal lawmakers have
reduced program funds.
The challenges nursing facilities in Ohio are facing reflect a broader
and concerning trend affecting facilities across the country, said Scott
Wiley in a statement, CEO of the Ohio Health Care Association, an
industry trade group.
“This issue has been growing as more residents face unstable housing,”
he said. “State oversight and resources are needed to help tackle the
issue on a larger scale to find meaningful, long-term solutions for
Ohioans who struggle with homelessness. It will require a collaborative
approach that a single nursing facility provider is not equipped to
manage on their own.”
‘As cruel as it sounds’
The state ombudsman’s office gets copies of every involuntary discharge
from a nursing home in Ohio. One of the first things they check, Wilkins
said, is the proposed discharge location.
Homeless shelter discharges are priority cases because they’re almost
always unsafe, he said. They can’t manage the 10 to 20 medications they
might need daily. Some rely on wheelchairs or walkers.
“Invariably, that ends up being a horrible experience for the individual
because they’ll go to the shelter, and typically, within two to three
days, the shelter will send them to the hospital because they can’t meet
their needs,” Wilkins said.
Often, the issues trace back to insurers, including Medicaid and
Medicare, that cut off residents’ benefits. Sometimes the facilities
cite aggressive behavior or substance use.
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Homeless shelters aren’t built to handle medically fragile patients.
They aren’t medical centers. Some may require residents to climb to a
top bunk, a tall task for older patients.
Marcus Roth, director of communications of the Coalition on Homelessness
and Housing in Ohio, said the practice puts the shelters in a tight
spot. They’re tending to a population they’re not equipped to handle,
but they’re also the de facto safety net.
“The emergency shelter system, to the extent we have a system, is often
the only thing available when other interventions don’t work,” he said.
Pelletier emphasized in an interview that such involuntary discharges to
shelters against residents’ wishes are rare. That said, she estimated
about 13,000 Ohioans are discharged from a nursing home each month.
Nursing homes, she said, have legal obligations to make sure that
discharges are “safe and appropriate.” And it’s not up to the
facilities, she said, to unilaterally decide where a person should go.
Whether a shelter is “safe and appropriate” is a fact-specific question.
Pelletier said there are instances where it could be, pending the care
needs of the resident and abilities of the shelter. It’s the kind of
thing that ombudsmen hone in on when reviewing discharges.
“The real issue is when people are discharged to a homeless shelter and
there’s been no work or investigation done on if that would be a safe or
appropriate discharge,” she said.
Bounced after 22 years
It didn’t matter that its patient was diabetic and struggled to manage
his blood sugar. Neither did his history of glaucoma, cataracts, or
suspected autism, or his 22 years of residency at the nursing home.
What mattered is that his insurance stopped paying, and the Laurels of
Hillsboro wanted him out, according to a Dec. 29, 2025 CMS inspection of
the facility.
The man told CMS inspectors in an interview that nursing home staff
never told him he was being taken to a homeless shelter.

Federal law says nursing home residents must be given at least 30 days’
notice before a discharge, barring health and safety emergencies. But
the patient at Laurels, who isn’t identified in the investigation,
wasn’t given any. According to his former roommate, facility staff
misrepresented the discharge, claiming he’d be going to an assisted
living apartment as opposed to an emergency shelter that would only
house him for up to 90 days.
The man wasn’t taught to manage his medications and showed up at the
shelter without any needles to use. He struggled to see with his
cataracts. He had no driver’s license, birth certificate or other
documents he would need to get a job, income or housing.
“I can’t believe they would do someone dirty like that,” the patient’s
roommate said to CMS inspectors.
Laurels of Hillsboro, via a receptionist who declined to provide her
name over the phone, declined to comment but said the facility is now in
“substantial compliance” with the state.
Rules broken
In some of the facilities cited by CMS, the providers allegedly failed
to ensure patients got their medications as they were discharged to
homeless shelters. And some failed to provide patients their 30 days of
notice before an involuntary discharge.
Meadowbrook Manor, in Trumbull County, sought to discharge a patient
with an array of long-term illnesses and a history of substance use and
homelessness, according to a July 8 inspection. He was given a 30-day
discharge notice, but was sent to a shelter 20 days later regardless.
He was given two weeks’ worth of medications, but no prescriptions,
medical appointments or care plan. The shelter staff identified a
“mismatch” given the man had trouble walking and couldn’t climb a ladder
to reach a top bunk, as the facility requires.
Meadowbrook staff refused to take him back.

At New Lebanon Rehabilitation and Healthcare Center, a woman’s insurer
sent her a termination letter for her treatment for a series of neural
and spinal disorders, plus depression and arthritis.
While she was entitled to 30 days’ notice, the facility gave her roughly
24 hours before discharging her to a homeless shelter. The facility’s
social services director said he didn’t know where the woman actually
went, only that a friend picked her up.
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