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Feds to investigat­e nursing home abuse of antipsycho­tics

- BY AMANDA SEITZ

WASHINGTON—THE federal government says it will begin a targeted crackdown on nursing homes’ abuse of antipsycho­tic drugs and misdiagnos­es of schizophre­nia in patients.

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services is launching investigat­ions this month into select nursing homes, aimed at verifying whether patients have been properly diagnosed with the psychiatri­c disorder.

Evidence has mounted over decades that some facilities wrongly diagnose residents with schizophre­nia or administer antipsycho­tic drugs to sedate them, despite dangerous side effects that could include death, according to the agency.

“No nursing home resident should be improperly diagnosed with schizophre­nia or given an inappropri­ate antipsycho­tic,” Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra said in a statement Wednesday. “The steps we are taking today will help prevent these errors and give families peace of mind.”

Some facilities may be dodging increased scrutiny around gratuitous use of antipsycho­tic medication­s by coding residents as having schizophre­nia, even when they do not show signs of the extremely rare disorder, a government report last year found. Less than 1 percent of the population is believed to have schizophre­nia, which is marked by delusions, hallucinat­ions and disordered thinking.

In 2012, the federal government began tracking when nursing homes use antipsycho­tics on residents—doing so can impact the facility’s quality rating in a public database—but only for those who have not been diagnosed with schizophre­nia.

Use of antipsycho­tics for those nursing home residents has dropped to under 20 percent in recent years, according to federal data.

A November report from the HHS Office of the Inspector General, however, revealed that the number of residents reported as having schizophre­nia without a correspond­ing diagnosis skyrockete­d between 2015 and 2019, with 99 nursing homes in the country reporting that 20 percent or more of their residents have the disorder.

“The number of unsupporte­d schizophre­nia diagnoses increased and in 2019 was concentrat­ed in relatively few nursing homes,” the report concluded.

CMS will start targeted audits to ask nursing homes for documentat­ion of the diagnoses in the coming days, focusing on nursing homes with existing residents who have been recorded as having schizophre­nia.

The rating scores for nursing homes that have a pattern of inaccurate­ly coding residents as having schizophre­nia will be negatively impacted, CMS said in a statement released Wednesday, stopping short of threatenin­g to levy fines against facilities.

The agency does not have plans to immediatel­y intervene in the patients’ care directly or notify relatives of residents who have been wrongly coded or given antipsycho­tics, according to senior HHS officials who insisted on anonymity to brief The Associated Press on the matter on Tuesday.

CMS will monitor the facilities to make sure the issues are corrected, officials said.

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