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Search Results for: nursing homes

TX Nursing Home Employees Quitting to Work at McDonald’s

April 12, 2016 by Honey Leave a Comment

Fast FoodAccording to reporters at Lubbock’s KLBK13, in a story titled, Nurses Quit Texas Nursing Homes to Work at McDonald’s, we face a dire shortage of nursing home beds by the end of this decade.

Nursing home employees, particularly certified nurse assistants, who are “front line” caregivers, get the worst pay, typically about $8/hour.

Meanwhile, McDonald’s is hiring, and they pay significantly more. Furthermore, their employees don’t have to mess with bed pans or risk injuries from transferring patients.

The story says TX nursing homes lose approximately $300 million per year. 85 percent of TX nursing home residents depend on Medicaid or Medicare. Each Medicaid patient is underfunded by 14 percent.

This dovetails with information I just received from Seven Acres, the Jewish nursing home here in Houston. Their April 2016 newsletter says, “Over 80% of our residents are so ill and indigent that they qualify for the state Medicaid program, which underfunds Seven Acres by $33,000 a year for each Medicaid resident. This translates into a $8 million annual loss for the Home. It is only through the generous support of our friends and community partners that we are able to offset the significant cost of care that Medicaid does not cover.”

Long-term care insurance (LTCi) ownership greatly increases the odds people will not receive care in a nursing home. Even the very best nursing homes – like Seven Acres – struggle with staffing shortages.

I’ve already sent Seven Acres my annual contribution.

Filed Under: Denial, Elephant in the Room, Helpful Information About LTC, I'll Just Self-Insure, Information About LTC Tagged With: Fast Food, home care, home health care, McDonald's, Medicaid, Medicare, nursing home care, Nursing Homes, Seven Acres Nursing Home

Homes on the Range

January 4, 2015 by Honey Leveen Leave a Comment

Nursing Home Care“Currently, 1.5 million Americans reside in nursing homes where they are often treated more like patients than residents. Despite the explosive expansion of nursing homes — to a current total of 16,100 — few older people want to live in one.” This is a quote from Jane Brody’s December 15, 2014 New York Times Wellness blog.

This quote makes exactly the same point I have for years, “… few family members would choose, if they had a choice, to place a beloved relative in one. The common belief is that nursing homes are depressing places where old people go to die.”

Nursing homes are primarily funded by Medicaid, which pays them at lower rates than their actual costs. Most nursing homes are in continual economic tailspins. Their future is bleak due not only to budget shortfalls and political stalemate in Washington, but also to an impending barrage of Baby Boomers who are failing to plan for long-term care (LTC). Such Boomers will further drain a system that I will argue is already tragically broken.

Nursing homes are inhumane warehouses for our most defenseless, vulnerable citizens. We can do better.

Many of us have known for years of Dr. Bill Thomas and his Green House Project. Green Houses are revenue neutral, far more dignified nursing home alternatives that reflect the good accomplishments we humans are capable of.

Our courageous and dedicated personal friend, Dale Bell,  founder of the Media Policy Center, has spent 12 years creating an acclaimed documentary called “Homes on the Range.” This poignant film spotlights what is possible when people who believe there is a better way achieve grass-roots cooperation. It is a heartwarming story of perseverance and hope.

Homes on the Range is the story about the citizens of Sheridan, WY, who decided their elders deserved a whole lot more than nursing home care. Click here to read about how Sheridan’s Greenhouse project was born and see a 20-minute video.

Filed Under: Helpful Information About LTC, Information About LTC Tagged With: Dale Bell, Dr. Bill Thomas, Green Houses, long-term care, Media Policy Center, Medicaid

Nursing Home Infections Are Increasing…Surprise (Not!)

October 17, 2014 by Honey Leveen Leave a Comment

Elder In Nursing HomeHere’s an October 9, 2014 article from McKnight’s LTC News describing recently published findings that show across the board infection rates in nursing homes have surged during the past five years. 

Quoting from the article, “The prevalence of viral hepatitis in nursing homes increased 48% between 2006 and 2010, the investigators determined. MDRO prevalence increased by 18% and pneumonia by 11%. The rates of urinary tract infections, septicemia and wound infections also rose.”

Here are several additional blogs I’ve done about Medicaid’s shortcomings. Because most long-term patients in nursing homes are on Medicaid (a form of Welfare), and because Medicaid’s reimbursement to nursing homes is actually less than the cost of caring for such patients, many nursing homes are unprofitable. We all agree that the most important employees in nursing homes are the custodial caregivers. These are the lowest paid people on the economic totem pole. Counter-intuitively, these critical frontline caregivers are often the first place nursing homes fire to cut expenses.

My opinion is that because of inadequate care in many Medicaid-funded nursing homes, corners are cut. Quality of care suffers. Sad outcomes then occur. This is what is causing the rapid rise of nursing home infections. It is not hard to connect the dots on this one.

Many nursing home patients end up in such facilities because they do not have money to access better care. People who own long-term care insurance (LTCi) are far less likely to wind up in Medicaid-funded nursing homes. They are far more likely to end up in preferable, far nicer assisted-living facilities.

Filed Under: Elephant in the Room, Helpful Information About LTC, I'll Just Self-Insure, Information About LTC Tagged With: Honey Leveen, Long Term Care insurance, LTCi, McKnights Long-Term Care News & Assisted Living, Medicaid, Nursing Homes, www.honeyleveen.com

Bad Nursing Home Gets $14 Million Punishment

July 28, 2014 by Honey Leveen Leave a Comment

Bad Nursing HomeA July 25, 2014 story in McKnights, by Tim Mullaney, reports on a $14 million award ($12.5 million was awarded in punitive damages) to the family of a nursing home patient. This story was also covered in the Boston Globe on July 24, 2014.

Quoting from the Globe story, “Judge Krupp instructed the jury that while punitive damages can be awarded for a company’s bad behavior, they can also be used to dissuade other nursing homes from similar conduct…the judge explained that the whole purpose of the punitive award is to send a message that you can’t get away with this anymore.”

How wonderful if the problem could simply be fixed by a judge using the court system to “teach a lesson”!

Again, the 8,000 pound elephant in the room is being ignored.

Especially in Texas, but throughout the country, nursing homes get paid less per diem than it costs them to care for their patients. Medicaid, which pays for the majority of long-term care in the US, needs an overhaul.

There is no doubt in my mind that the nursing home sued accepted mostly Medicaid patients. Here are a couple of blogs I did about murders that occurred in Lexington Place nursing home in Houston. Lexington Place accepts mostly Medicaid paid patients.

When nursing homes do not get paid enough, there are not enough caregivers. This directly affects the quality of care nursing home patients receive.

Click here for several blogs I’ve done that explain why Medicaid paid nursing home care often leads to sad outcomes.

Those of us who own long-term care insurance (LTCi) are far more likely to have the money to avoid nursing homes and receive care at home or in an assisted living facility.

Filed Under: Elephant in the Room, Helpful Information About LTC, I'll Just Self-Insure, Medicaid Planning Tagged With: McKnights Long-Term Care News & Assisted Living, Medicaid, Nursing Homes, The Boston Globe, Tim Mullaney

Finding Good Nursing Home Care Is Not Easy!

July 2, 2014 by Honey Leveen Leave a Comment

Good Nursing Home CareA newly published survey called “Raising Expectations” by AARP, The Commonwealth Fund and the SCAN Foundation, is a report card for nursing facilities across the country.

The news for us in Texas isn’t good, reports Howard Gleckman in this Forbes piece on this new study, published June 25, 2014. The research finds that on average the most affordable facilities are in Oklahoma, the District of Columbia, Utah, Kansas, Missouri, Georgia, Texas, Iowa, Louisiana, and Arkansas. But nearly half of those states—Oklahoma, Utah, Kansas, and Texas– rank in the bottom 10 for at least 2 of the study’s 3 quality measures. Texas and Oklahoma rank near the bottom for all three.

Most of Mr. Gleckman’s piece describes how unable most Americans are to pay for their own long-term care. I will concentrate instead the correlation between low cost and low quality care.

In Texas, Medicaid nursing home reimbursement is one of the lowest in the country.

Nursing homes are not where anyone with great wealth or long-term care insurance chooses to receive care.

Here in Houston, we’ve made headlines lately with a spate of nursing home murders.

If nursing homes are paid less than it costs them to actually provide care (as they are in Texas), the result is a cascade of problems, including but not limited to  insufficient, underpaid caregivers, inappropriate admissions (accepting extremely needful people in order to get the census up), increased safety and health hazards, patient negligence and warehousing, the list goes on.

The American Association for Long-Term Care Insurance (www.aaltci.org) states that approximately 80 percent of long-term care insurance (LTCi) claims are not for nursing home care. LTCi gives policyholders the ability to instead stay at home or access assisted living. My own experience is that very few of the approximately 300 LTCi client claims I’ve seen paid were for nursing home care.

Because a great many people choose to ignore the need for responsible long-term care planning and are therefore unprepared to pay when the need for care arises, the majority of long-term care in the US is paid for by Medicaid (Welfare). If you don’t plan and you don’t own LTCi, you are greatly increasing your odds of ending up in a nursing home.

Filed Under: Elephant in the Room, Helpful Information About LTC, I'll Just Self-Insure, Information About LTC Tagged With: AARP, assisted living, Howard Gleckman, Lexington Place Nursing Facility, Medicaid, Nursing Homes, SCAN Foudantion, The Commonwealth Fund, www.forbes.com

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Phone: 713-988-4671
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Email: honey@honeyleveen.com

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