Allowing Owners with Poor Records to Take Over Nursing Home Facilities, a Pattern that Must Stop!

Karen Caffiero, left, and her son, Andrew Burg,  talk in his room at Absolut Center for Nursing and Rehabilitation at Aurora Park in East Aurora on May 9. The nursing home is one of 16 in Erie and Niagara counties that were bought by downstate investors since 2007. (Robert Kirkham/Buffalo News)

Karen Caffiero, left, and her son, Andrew Burg, talk in his room at Absolut Center for Nursing and Rehabilitation at Aurora Park in East Aurora on May 9. The nursing home is one of 16 in Erie and Niagara counties that were bought by downstate investors since 2007. (Robert Kirkham/Buffalo News)

N.Y. fails to weed out nursing home owners with records of poor care

New York State gave licenses to operate at least 10 Buffalo area nursing homes in the last decade to new owners who had been fined for providing poor care to residents at other nursing homes.

Advocates for nursing home residents say the state must do more to prevent nursing home owners providing low-quality care from buying more long-term care facilities.

“It is a real problem with people getting ownership of facilities when they have a poor record of care in other nursing facilities,” said Toby Edelman, a senior attorney at the Center for Medicare Advocacy. “To me the biggest predictor of how a person will do is, how that person did in other facilities the person already owns?”

“New York State falls into this disturbing but all-too-familiar pattern — allowing owners with poor records to take over more facilities,” she said.

Sixteen of the 47 nursing homes in Erie and Niagara counties have been bought since 2007 by for-profit, out-of-town owners. Many of those homes are among the region’s worst rated.

The state allowed some of the out-of-town investors to buy more nursing homes, despite poor ratings and state and federal fines totaling at least $325,000 at ones they already operated.

For instance, in February the state allowed three new New York City area investors to become principals in the corporation that owns Comprehensive Rehabilitation and Nursing Center at Williamsville. The state knew when it approved the change that the new investors owned other nursing homes that had been fined $86,884 in the prior two years for providing poor care. It also knew the federal government was considering an additional $173,110 penalty against one of the homes for failing to protect a disabled resident from abuse.

Yet the state Health Department concluded that it had received “no negative information” about the character and competence of the new co-owners.

The Health Department, which reviews applications to operate nursing homes, now more thoroughly evaluates applicants’ track records running other long-term care facilities, a deputy health commissioner said in September.

Applications to buy nursing homes are approved or rejected by the Health Department’s Public Health and Health Planning Council, 25 volunteers appointed by the governor to serve six-year terms. The members generally represent different disciplines in the health care field from both the public and private sectors.

The Health Department staff about a year ago began providing council members with the federal government’s ratings of other nursing homes owned by prospective buyers, said Deputy Health Commissioner Daniel Sheppard.

He said that sends a message to applicants that quality matters.

But a critic of the council, Assemblyman James Skoufis, D-Woodbury, says its volunteers lack the time to thoroughly vet prospective owners and often rubber-stamp recommendations from the council’s staff.

Skoufis, who was recently elected to the State Senate, has suggested doing away with volunteers and professionalizing the council.

To read the article from THE BUFFALO NEWS, click here.

 

 

 

The Elderly of NY and Elsewhere Deserve Better, they are our Most Vulnerable

November 27, 2018 11:57 AM

The lawsuits allege that understaffing at the facilities has led to infections and unsanitary conditions

A New York law firm filed two class-action lawsuits today against two New York City nursing homes affiliated with Sentosa Care, a large for-profit nursing home group. The lawsuits, brought on behalf of a former patient and the surviving brother of another patient, allege that understaffing at the facilities has led to infections, unsanitary conditions and other examples of inadequate care in violation of state and federal law.

The lawsuits name as defendants the Bronx-based Bay Park Center for Nursing and Rehabilitation in the Bronx and Brooklyn-based Seagate Rehabilitation and Nursing Center, all the owners of the facilities and Sentosa Care itself.

“We’ve gotten many, many complaints from residents [of these facilities] about the horrendous conditions people were left in,” said Jeremiah Frei-Pearson, a partner in the law firm Finkelstein, Blankinship, Frei-Pearson and Garber, which represents the patients in both cases. “People were left in urine and waste for way too long. Federal data also corroborated that these homes are horrific and our own investigation corroborated the conditions.”

Sentosa Care, the subject of a 2015 exposé by ProPublica highlighting low quality ratings at many of its facilities, has nevertheless expanded in New York in other states in recent years. Sentosa Care had at least 25 facilities and nearly 5,400 beds statewide as of 2015, according to ProPublica, but it’s unclear how many New York facilities are affiliated with the network now. In January the Grand Healthcare System sought state approval to purchase two Long Island nursing homes affiliated with Sentosa.

Sherard Clark, the main plaintiff in the case against Bay Park, alleged that he had an open wound on his foot while he was a resident at the nursing home earlier this year, and that the wound got infected multiple times because of a lack of attention from staff. He was often left to change his own bandages and even overheard a doctor reprimanding a nurse for not attending to it, Clark charged in the complaint. When he contracted a staph infection, the home didn’t take the necessary measures to treat it or schedule an appointment with a podiatrist, he added. Clark was also left attached to an empty IV multiple times, and on one occasion, when he attempted to remove it himself, he passed out and fell, hurting his head, according to the complaint.

New York law doesn’t mandate specific patient-to-staff ratios in its hospitals and nursing homes. But Frei-Pearson said, in addition to damages, he plans to seek court orders requiring “sufficient” staffing at both homes to maintain quality care. His law firm has had some success seeking such staff improvements in the past. Earlier this year the law firm reached a settlement of a class action suit against a Syracuse nursing home that included a commitment to boost staffing.

Staffing has been a major issue as the union 1199SEIU negotiates new contracts with 65 downstate nursing homes.

“When it comes to staffing, they’re always short every day, and I think staffing is supposed to be a top priority because quality care is our main concern,” Carol Daley, a unit clerk who has worked at Bay Park for 11 years, said in a video recorded at an informational picket outside the facility last month. “Without that, our residents are at risk for having decubitus, [also known as a bed sore], and anything that goes with not having the good care that they deserve.”

Both Bay Park and Seagate have ratings of three out of five stars on the federal Nursing Home Compare site. Both received just one star for staffing—far below average—but nevertheless scored an above-average five stars on clinical quality measures. The state Health Department gives Bay Park four out of five stars. The facility was hit with 23 citations over the last four years, lower than the statewide average of 32. Seagate scored a three out of five overall from the state Health Department, with 27 citations over the last four years.

To continue reading in Crain’s click here.

Skilled Nursing Homes and Healthcare Facilities in the US, a Travesty – If You Have Information, Please Send It Along

August 13, 2018

House committee needs information for investigation of substandard nursing home care

You may remember that in April of this year, the House Energy and Commerce Committee sent a strong letter to CMS stating that a number of reports and tragic events had raised questions about the adequacy of CMS’ oversight of nursing homes. The Committee requested a wide range of documents and information from CMS.  As part of the Committee’s work, staff on the E&C’s Oversight and Investigations Subcommittee are investigating nursing home care.They have contacted Consumer Voice because they want to look into facilities/corporations with particularly poor care and speak with residents who have experienced substandard care and their family members. 
 
This is a tremendous opportunity to highlight nursing home problems that we all see and hear about every day and that continue year after year.  While we don’t know what will come from this investigation, we want to provide the subcommittee with as much information as we can. To do this, we need your help!
 
The subcommittee is requesting the following:
 
1.    Facilities/owners  – going back no more than roughly 5 years
  • Individual facilities with very poor care, particularly facilities with chronically deficient care. Please indicate the location of the facility.
  • Chains/corporations with a reputation for substandard care
  • Individual owners who have a track record and are well-known for operating bad homes

2.    Residents and families

 
Staff of the Oversight and Investigations Subcommittee would like to talk to residents and/or family members who have experienced poor care (or other issues) within the past 5 years and are willing to share their personal experience. 
 
Please provide:
  • First and last names
  • Whether they are a resident or a family member
  • Contact information (phone number and/or email).  Note:  You may want to consider limiting this to residents with a phone in their room or a cell phone to better ensure privacy and confidentiality.
  • A very brief description of the problem(s) they experienced (for instance, developed pressure ulcers because there were not enough staff to reposition me as needed).
 Subcommittee members will speak with individuals by phone, although it’s possible that not all individuals will be contacted for an interview depending on the number of responses. All information will remain confidential.
 
Please help us help the Oversight and Investigations Subcommittee staff investigate poor care by sending any of the requested information by August 20  to Robyn Grant atrgrant@theconsumervoice.org
 
A very big thank you to everyone for your assistance!
You have received this e-mail through your subscription to the National Consumer Voice for Quality Long-Term Care’s e-mail list. 
Recipients of this email include all state long-term care ombudsmen, Consumer Voice members, Action Network members and other individuals who have subscribed to our e-mail list
If you did not subscribe or would no longer like to receive e-mail updates, unsubscribe here
Clicking the unsubscribe link will remove you from all Consumer Voice and NORC email lists.
National Consumer Voice for Quality Long-Term Care – 1001 Connecticut Avenue, NW, Suite 632 – Washington, DC 20036 – telephone: (202) 332-2275 – fax: (202) 403-3473 – info@theconsumervoice.org

 

 

In August, the House Energy and Commerce Committee requested information regarding Nursing Homes, in response to a number of tragic events that “raised questions about the adequacy of CMS’ oversight” of nursing homes.

While the deadline has since passed, at least officially, we do not believe that they would ignore reports, were anything to be sent along. The following is the letter which precipitated the committee’s response.

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Shlomo Rechnitz, the Other Side of a Mirror – Cali Nursing Home Reform

shameonshlomo

California passes nursing home transparency law

California Gov. Jerry Brown signed legislation this month requiring nursing home owners to provide more information about “insider” companies that may siphon scarce resources away from nursing residents through nursing homes’ inflated payments for supplies, rents, and services.

The legislation authored by Assemblyman Wood (D-Healdsburg) stemmed from a state audit of nursing homes earlier this year that focused on Brius Healthcare, California’s largest nursing home company.

Wood and Sen. Mike McGuire (D-Healdsburg) requested the audit following concerns raised by the National Union of Healthcare Workers (NUHW), which published a report showing that during 2015 Brius nursing homes purchased $67 million in goods and services from 65 “insider” companies owned by Brius CEO Shlomo Rechnitz and his relatives.

In 2015, Rechnitz’s “insider” companies – including paper landlords – stood to gain as much as $12 million by charging inflated rents to Brius nursing homes, according to NUHW’s report. This money, says NUHW, should have been spent on care and services for nursing home residents who often lack adequate staffing, support and care.

The state audit, published in May 2018, found that the California Department of Public Health failed to perform necessary inspections or issue timely citations for substandard care. In addition, California State Auditor Elaine Howle found the reporting rules for nursing homes failed to show whether operators are profiting from business deals with “insider” companies owned by nursing home executives.

To improve transparency of these related-party transactions, Wood’s bill (Assembly Bill 1953) requires nursing home owners to disclose whether they have “an ownership or control interest of 5% or more in a related party … that provides any service to the skilled nursing facility.”

Under those circumstances, the nursing home must disclose all of the services provided by the related-party company, the number of people who provide the service, and any other information requested by state officials.

If the nursing home receives goods, fees, and services worth $10,000 or more per year from a related-party company, then this “insider” company must give state officials a copy of its profit and loss statement as well as data on caregiver staffing levels inside the nursing home.

The bill “will now ensure transparency and reporting that will allow us to make sure that these companies are not being used to generate excessive profits for the owners of these facilities on the backs of the residents,” Wood told Skilled Nursing News.

Sen. McGuire, who voted for the bill, praised the new law.

To read the article in its entirety click here.

Brius residents in Marin report going weeks without showers — Chafraud-Depravitch

Here’s the latest about some of the substandard care found in nursing homes controlled by ultra-Orthodox multi-millionaire Shlomo Yehuda Rechnitz. From Briuswatch.org: One of Brius Healthcare’s largest nursing homes is “woefully understaffed,” forcing residents to go weeks without a shower and sit in their own excrement for hours waiting for assistance, according to a recently […]

via Brius residents in Marin report going weeks without showers — Chafraud-Depravitch

Brius Hit with Class Action Lawsuits – briuswatch – Watching out for the Elderly

Brius hit with over a dozen class action lawsuits

Brius has been hit with 15 class action lawsuits accusing the nursing home conglomerate of systemically understaffing its nursing homes to maximize profits, while delivering substandard care to thousands of elderly residents.

“These lawsuits are an effort on behalf of these vulnerable citizens to ensure that their needs are met,” Attorney Stephen Garcia told the Eureka Times-Standard. Garcia’s law firm and The Arns Law Firm in San Francisco allege that Brius homes across California misled potential residents about their compliance with staffing requirements.

In a statement to the Marin Independent Journal, Jill Basinger, a spokeswoman for Brius owner Shlomo Rechnitz, claimed that Brius homes “not only maintain” minimum staffing requirements, “they even exceed them.”

However, Brius has been cited multiple times in recent years for understaffing, including at the Novato Healthcare Center and San Rafael Healthcare and Wellness Center, which were included in the class action lawsuits. In March, Brius caregivers from both homes, represented by the National Union of Healthcare Workers, joined residents and their loved ones at a public forum to call on Brius to put an end to chronic understaffing.

Earlier this year, a state investigation found the 181-bed Novato facility “woefully understaffed,” forcing residents to go weeks without a shower and sit in their own excrement for hours waiting for assistance.

Last year, the California Department of Public Health fined Brius’ San Rafael facility $15,000 for violating the state’s minimum staffing laws.

There has been heightened attention to nursing home staffing after recent reports found that major skilled nursing facilities were not providing accurate data to state and federal regulators.

In June, Medicare lowered its star ratings for staffing levels in one in 11 of the nation’s nursing homes because they either had inadequate numbers of registered nurses or failed to provide payroll data that proved they had the required nursing coverage, Kaiser Health News reported.

The lawsuits allege that understaffing at Brius, which is California’s largest nursing home operator, resulted in tragic outcomes for residents.

One lawsuit filed in Alameda County Superior Court alleges that understaffing at Brius’ Alameda Healthcare & Wellness Center contributed to the 2017 death of Cathy Campbell, a 61-year-old Stockton woman.

According to the lawsuit, Campbell, who suffered from hypertension and chronic kidney failure, developed a severe bedsore and urinary tract infection that worsened because the facility lacked sufficient staff to care for her. Her health continued to suffer after she was transferred to a second Brius home in Oakland.

Garcia, who wrote that Campbell’s needs were “flat-out ignored,” blamed the Alameda facility for failing to properly treat her in a statement to the East Bay Times. It “knew that by not elevating her to a higher level of care when the sore reached a Stage III, they were violating the law, but in the interest of profits over patients, they made a conscious choice to wrongfully deny needed medical care.”

TO READ THE ARTICLE IN ITS ENTIRETY CLICK, HERE.