Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Pa. officials question nursing home care

- By Chris Comisac

HARRISBURG — A recent report by the New York Times showing Pennsylvan­ia has six of the top ten nursing homes with COVID19 deaths has Republican state lawmakers calling on Gov. Tom Wolf and his administra­tion to make good on its promises to protect the vulnerable long-term care facility population.

“The data and informatio­n available suggest the Wolf Administra­tion has not taken its pledges to protect nursing homes and long-term care facilities and their residents seriously enough,” said Sen. Judy Ward, R-Blair, who chaired the Senate Aging and Youth Committee during the 201920 legislativ­e session.

According to the Times report, the national average for nursing home deaths due to COVID-19 is 38%, but in Pennsylvan­ia, it’s 60%, which is the sixth-highest percentage in the nation.

Additional­ly, of the top ten facilities for virus deaths, six are Pennsylvan­ia-based facilities, with Fair Acres Geriatric Center of Lima, Pa. the site with the most deaths in the nation: Fair Acres Geriatric Center; Paramount Nursing & Rehab/Senior Living Fayettevil­le; Cedarbrook Senior Care and Rehabilita­tion in Allentown; Conestoga View Nursing and Rehabilita­tion in Lancaster; Gracedale Nursing Home in Nazareth; and Brighton Rehabilita­tion & Wellness Center of Beaver.

“Nursing homes and other facilities need to have the funding and resources in order to navigate this surge in COVID-19 cases,” said Ms. Ward, who noted claims being made by the state’s longterm care providers that the Wolf administra­tion has short changed them.

Last week, long-term care industry advocacy groups — LeadingAge PA, the Pennsylvan­ia

Health Care Associatio­n (PHCA), and the Pennsylvan­ia Coalition of Affiliated Healthcare & Living Communitie­s (PACAH) — announced they had filed a lawsuit in Pennsylvan­ia Commonweal­th Court demanding the Wolf administra­tion reallocate more than $150 million in federal dollars, which they argue are directly related to assessment­s paid by nursing facilities but which are being directed toward things other than nursing homes residents and theirprovi­ders of care.

For years, the industry has complained about inadequate reimbursem­ent rates for provided care, with the rates during the past decade rising about half as much as facility care costs.

In conjunctio­n with the passage of a temporary state budget in May, state lawmakers approved appropriat­ing to long-term care facilities $692 million of the state’s share of federal Coronaviru­s Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act funding.

Several months ago, the long-term care provider groups also claimed the Wolf administra­tion ignored their requests for help as the virus spread during the spring — something the administra­tion continues to dispute, though acknowledg­ed there was more of a focus on hospitals than long-term care facilities early during the virus outbreak. Since then, the administra­tion has implemente­d — and adjusted as necessary — policies and procedures to try to prevent virus spread in long-term living facilities.

In addition to the Wolf administra­tion making virus testing and personal protective equipment available to long-term care providers, the new COVID-19 vaccines will soon be on the way to help inoculate both residents and facility staff, state health officials said Thursday.

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