Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

TROUBLED NURSING HOME

Pa. health secretary addresses confusion

- By Sean D. Hamill Sean D. Hamill: shamill@postgazett­e.com,412263-2579 or Twitter: @SeanDHamil­l

The state imposes a manager at the Brighton Rehabilita­tion and Wellness Center.

After confusion this week about whether the state had imposed a “temporary manager” for a Beaver County nursing home battling the state’s worst outbreak of COVID19, Pennsylvan­ia Health Secretary Dr. Rachel Levine on Friday tried to clear it up by declaring the state will place a temporary manager at the troubled facility.

“The situation at the [Brighton Rehabilita­tion and Wellness Center] nursing home has been very challengin­g,” she said during Friday’s online state news conference. “We are doing everything we can to try to help the patients and the staff at that facility.

“We had put in what we call a temporary manager, so this is voluntary, on behalf of the facility,” she added. “They’re calling it a consultant, — it’s a little matter of semantics — but we are actually going to be placing in a state-chosen and state-funded temporary manager for that facility presently.”

Dr. Levine and the state said last week it had imposed a manager — a move that is very rare for the state to take for any facility.

On April 29, during the state’s daily online news conference, Dr. Levine announced the state had placed a temporary manager at Brighton Rehabilita­tion two weeks earlier, on April 15.

The next day, State Department of Health spokesman Nate Wardle cited the state statute that gave the state authority to place that temporary manager at Brighton Rehabilita­tion. He explained “the temporary manager provides support and oversight of operations at the facility” and said the manager was hired in agreement with Brighton’s owners.

The state statute essentiall­y says the state may impose a temporary manager if either the facility failed to come into compliance within a stated deadline or the state has decided the facility is “unwilling or unable to achieve compliance.”

But confusion over what role the temporary manager — The Long Hill Company — actually had at Brighton Rehabilita­tion began almost immediatel­y.

The Long Hill Company put out a release on April 30 saying it was “not managing, operating or surveying the facility.”

Later the same day, Brighton’s owners put out a statement in which they also referred to Long Hill as a “consultant,” not a manager.

But that became even more confusing Thursday when Long Hill put out another clarificat­ion, explaining again it was “retained as a consultant to provide a limited review of the practices and protocols of the facility.”

That prompted a reversal by the state Friday, with Mr. Wardle sending out a statement that declared Long Hill was never a temporary manager at Brighton.

“Long Hill Company had a contract with Brighton Rehabilita­tion and Wellness Center as a consultant. The contract was not with the Department of Health. The department had recommende­d to Brighton that they should contact Long Hill to assist them,” Mr. Wardle wrote in an emailed statement. “The role that they played at the facility was similar to what the department would call a temporary manager. However, since we did not bring them into the facility, they were not acting as a temporary manager on behalf of the state in this instance.”

All of this came as local and state political leaders continue to put pressure on the state and federal government to investigat­e Brighton as the number of deaths there rises further.

Brighton has had 312 residents test positive for COVID-19, and 71 of them have died, according to the state’s data update on Friday, in a building that held about 460 residents when the outbreak began in March. 21 staff members have also tested positive.

Beaver County commission­ers have asked for an investigat­ion. U.S. Sens. Bob Casey and Pat Toomey have put pressure on the federal government to do more, and on Thursday, U.S. Rep. Conor Lamb, D-Mt. Lebanon, who represents Beaver County, asked the federal government to investigat­e Brighton.

 ?? Andrew Rush/Post-Gazette ?? Brighton Rehabilita­tion and Wellness Center in Brighton Township.
Andrew Rush/Post-Gazette Brighton Rehabilita­tion and Wellness Center in Brighton Township.

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