Tampa Bay Times – Letter to the Editor: Restore staffing levels

January 18, 2012

As a nursing home caregiver, I was deeply saddened when I learned of this heartbreaking death, which could have been prevented. This was a tragic end to the life of an elderly woman whose care was in the hands of others. These are the types of accidents that can take place when patient loads are too high and caregivers are pulled in too many directions at once.

Last year, staffing levels were cut and, as a result, the health and safety of nursing home residents are at risk. We must restore staffing levels. Our elders deserve to be protected from harm and to live their lives out with dignity.

Jean Berg, CNA, Hudson

Original Letter Available Here:

http://www.tampabay.com/opinion/letters/wednesdays-letters-pip-bill-increases-stress-on-emergency-rooms/1211015

Tampa Tribune – Letter to the Editor: Hear our voices

November 7, 2011

During this special observance of Residents’ Rights Month, we must stand up and speak for those who cannot speak for themselves. Why can’t they speak? They are lying in beds — often alone and weak. Many do not have family members to come and take them outside to breathe in the fresh air. They are our seniors, and due to budget cuts to health care, they are receiving less bedside care. I know because I am a certified nurse assistant.

My joy in life is to make my patients smile. We owe it to them to speak up on their behalf and encourage nursing home administrators and lawmakers to make safe staffing levels a priority.

Cynthia Wilson – CNA
Tampa

Original Letter Available Here:

http://www2.tbo.com/news/opinion/2011/nov/07/meopino1-letters-to-the-editor-revenue-enhancement-ar-300980/

Tallahassee Democrat – Letter to the Editor: Make staffing levels a nursing home priority

September 18, 2011

With the severe budget cuts to Florida’s health care programs, our seniors have truly paid the price.

The reports of abuse, neglect and increased rates of infection in our nursing homes and assisted living facilities are daunting. We are pleased to see that there will be efforts to improve oversight, especially with the heavy patient loads health care workers are carrying.

Inadequate staffing levels can lead to senseless pain and suffering. Safe staffing levels must be a priority to ensure residents have enough bedside care to have some level of quality in their final years of life.

Our seniors deserve at least that much.

BARBARA A. DEVANE
badevane1@yahoo.com

Original Letter Available Here:

http://www.tallahassee.com/article/20110804/OPINION02/108040306/Letters-editor

Palm Beach Post: Cuts at nursing homes: Local centers have options, say they won’t reduce staff

By Stacey Singer and Toni-Ann Miller

July 1, 2011

Starting this month, Florida’s 70,000 nursing home residents could find fewer nurses at their bedside after the Florida Legislature voted to lower the homes’ minimum staffing standard by about 8 percent to help them absorb another round of Medicaid budget cuts.

The change means that nursing home patients will be assured an average of just 3.6 hours a day of contact with either a registered nurse, licensed practical nurse or certified nursing assistant, a reduction of about 18 minutes per patient per day.

An estimated 3,000 to 3,500 nurses could lose their jobs statewide as nursing homes shed staff, according to some estimates.
Three out of four seniors in long-term nursing home care have dementia or Alzheimer’s disease and need help with basic needs such as eating and drinking.

Jack McRay, advocacy manager for AARP Florida, predicted that malnutrition, dehydration, falls, bedsores and life-threatening blood infections in nursing homes will increase as nurses become tougher to find.

“You don’t take the nursing out of nursing homes,” McRay said. “We think it was very shortsighted on the part of the legislature.”
The major policy change was inserted into an eleventh-hour budget conforming bill, apparently to mute public input, he said.
“It was published the night before the legislature was adjourned, so it was an up-or-down vote and there was no hearing on this standard,” McRay said.

Medicaid budget cuts are trimming 6.5 percent from nursing homes’ already below-cost reimbursement rates, nursing home representatives said.

In Palm Beach County, 51 nursing homes will lose a combined $13 million because of the cuts, according to the Florida Health Care Association, the long-term care industry’s trade group in Tallahassee.

The Morse Geriatric Center has more than 60 percent of its residents on Medicaid and stands to lose more than $850,000 from the state budget cuts in 2011-2012, the trade group reported.

The suburban West Palm Beach center is a nonprofit that receives some community donations. It will seek savings in food service, vendor contracts and possibly employee raises before cutting staff, CEO Keith Myers said.

“I refuse to cut our front line staff,” Myers said.

The Palm Beach County Health Care District’s public nursing home, the Edward J. Healey Rehabilitation and Nursing Center, has about 70 percent of its residents on Medicaid, said agency spokeswoman Robin Kish. The Healey Center will lose about $460,000 in reimbursements this fiscal year, she said. Because it’s taxpayer-supported, it won’t cut staff, either.

But that won’t be an option in most places.

Statewide, an estimated 40 percent of Florida nursing homes would have operated at a loss in 2011-2012 without the flexibility to cut professional staff, the Florida Health Care Association warned.

The association tried throughout the legislative session to prevent another year of drastic budget cuts to Medicaid’s nursing home rates, said reimbursement director Tony Marshall. Ultimately, the state chose to balance its budget by taking $187 million from Medicaid’s nursing homes, Marshall said.

“We agree that better staffing leads to better care,” Marshall said. “You can’t staff if you don’t have the adequate funding.”

He said the 3.6-hour standard was determined with the help of a state-commissioned University of South Florida study in 2009. The study found that better staffing requirements passed in 2002 had significantly reduced problems at nursing homes, including lawsuits. The standard rose through the years to 3.9 hours minimum, but most of the benefits had been achieved by the time the standard had reached 3.6 hours, Marshall said.

The state average by 2007 exceeded four hours of nurse care per patient per day, above the national average. But those averages are far below what several studies have said is necessary.

Most studies have shown that patients do better in homes with a greater mix of registered nurses. The Institute of Medicine and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services have said the ideal level of care in nursing homes is 45 minutes of registered nurse staffing per resident per day.

In 2007, Florida nursing home patients’ contact with registered nurses averaged 16.2 minutes a day. Here, staffers were more likely to be nurse assistants, whose pay averaged $11.73 an hour in 2007, compared with $26.19 an hour for registered nurses.
AARP is encouraging nursing home caregivers to sign its petition insisting that the homes commit to maintaining their nurse staffing. About 3,000 caregivers have signed it so far, McRay said.

Marshall said the average state nursing home is surviving on a profit margin of just 4 percent to 6 percent, making AARP’s demands unrealistic.

“It’s unfortunate that this is the route that had to be chosen” to reduce Florida’s budget deficit, Marshall said. “We will be back to the legislature to try to close that gap next year.”

Health News Florida: Nursing home staffing level drops today

By Brittany Davis

July 1, 2011

Nursing home residents may have less face time with their caregivers after a law takes effect today that revises minimum staffing levels.

The law is part of an effort to help nursing homes deal with the $187.5 million in Medicaid cuts outlined in the state’s budget.
Nursing home residents will be entitled to 3.6 hours of direct care per day, down from 3.9.

The state requires 2.5 of those hours to be from a certified nurse, down from the current requirement of 2.7 hours. In 2007, the Legislature passed a law requiring 2.9 hours of care.

Sen. Joe Negron, who sponsored the bill, said the move could save the nursing home industry about $40 million per year, allowing them more flexibility to deal with budget cuts. Nursing homes will lose about 7 percent of their budgets.

“We were requiring these nursing homes to meet this standard, but we weren’t giving them the money to do it,” he said. “Some of these nursing homes are barely breaking even.”

Many states have no minimum staffing ratios, Negron added.

Some nursing homes may choose to offer more than the minimum hours of care, but many rely heavily on Medicaid and have already announced staff reductions as a result of the lowered requirement, said Dale Ewart, vice president of healthcare union 1199 SEIU.

Ewart said that union caregivers delivered petitions to the administrations of 41 nursing homes last week, urging them to maintain their staffing levels.

Medicaid pays for 61 percent of the total billable days in nursing homes, Medicare pays for 19 percent and the remaining 20 percent is paid for through private sources such as insurance or residents’ personal funds, according to data from the Agency for Healthcare Administration.

Cloreta Morgan, who has worked at Unity Health and Rehabilitation Center in Miami for 38 years, said the nursing home laid-off 23 staff members in light of the lowered requirements. Her job was spared because of her seniority, she said.

“We submitted a petition asking them to ignore the changes to the law, but administration never addressed it with us,” she said.
Unity Health and Rehabilitation Center did not respond to calls from a Health News Florida reporter.

Ralph Marrinson, president of Senior Care Residences in Fort Lauderdale, said most nursing homes have no choice but to cut back on staff, but that he is looking for ways to keep care consistent by decreasing paperwork and other inefficiencies that stand in the way of bedside time.

“Everyone is going back in and digging into their budget and trying to find a way to save without impacting the level of care,” he said.

Florida first implemented minimum staffing levels in nursing homes in 2001. One 2002-2007 study, funded by the Agency for Healthcare Administration and carried about by the University of South Florida, found that higher staffing levels mean fewer falls and bedsores for residents.

Face-time with caregivers also helps patients stay mentally active, said Dr. Robert Schwartz, professor and chair of the University of Miami’s Department of Family Medicine and Community Health.

“I can understand the state in terms of looking for areas to cut their budget, but as a physician it’s tough to justify that as an area that should be cut,” he said.

Associated Press: Groups call on nursing homes to maintain staffing

June 29, 2011

MIAMI — Advocates for nursing home patients and the workers who care for them are calling on facilities to maintain their current staffing levels even though more lax standards go into law Friday.

The new staff-to-resident ratio requirements reduce the average amount of direct care provided residents by 18 minutes a day.
AARP and the United Healthcare Workers are both issuing calls not to reduce staffing.

AARP says relaxing the standards “could put tens of thousands of very frail, vulnerable Floridians at risk.”

Sun Sentinel: Budget deal gives nursing homes lower staffing mandates

By Aaron Deslatte

May 5, 2011

TALLAHASSEE — Florida nursing homes serving Medicaid patients are taking significant reimbursement cuts to the tune of $187 million in the $69.6 billion budget that lawmakers are preparing to pass on Friday.

But House and Senate lawmakers are trying to make it up to the industry, inserting language into the budget conforming bills that will lower the average number of hours a day that nursing homes are required to provide direct-care to patients.

The chamber’s budget chairs — meeting in their last conference of the session — signed off on dozens of final agreements Thursday buried within the 50 or so budget conforming bills that among other things, will lower the minimum weekly average of hours of direct-care that homes have to provide nursing care from 3.9 hours a day to 3.6 hours.

Nursing assistant staffing hours would also drop from 2.7 hours to 2.5 hours.

After the budget meeting, a union for nursing home workers blasted the move as an erosion of Florida’s once-heralded minimum-staffing requirement for nursing homes enacted in 2001.

“This can potentially endanger lives, kill jobs and hurt our economy. Without adequate hands-on care, nursing home residents run the risk of getting pressure sores, falling down or suffering from malnutrition,” said Cloreta Morgan, a CNA at Unity Health and Rehab Center in Miami and member of 1199 SEIU United Healthcare Workers East.