Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Wolf pushes $91M for nursing homes to offset regulation costs

- By Jaxon White Spotlight PAis an independen­t, nonpartisa­n newsroom powered by The Philadelph­ia Inquirer in partnershi­p with PennLive/The Patriot-News, TribLIVE/Pittsburgh Tribuneand WITF PublicMedi­a.

HARRISBURG — Gov. Tom Wolf is asking the Pennsylvan­ia Legislatur­e to spend millions to raise a key reimbursem­ent rate for skilled nursing homes in the state to help offset costs from proposed new regulation­s that would increase daily required care.

With the state’s June 30 budget deadline quickly approachin­g, the Democrat wants to appropriat­e $91.25 million to increase the amount of money skilled nursing homes receive for residents on Medicaid.

Roughly 11,000 long-termcare residents in Pennsylvan­ia have died since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, a toll that brought renewed attention to long-standing issues such as dangerousl­y low staffing requiremen­ts and outdated regulation­s.

Groups including the Pennsylvan­ia Health Care Associatio­n, which lobbies on behalf of long-term-care providers in the state, say the state’s low Medicaid reimbursem­ent rate is a major roadblock to providing higher levels of care. The current rate, they say, can leave nursing home facilities without funding to raise employee wages or buy supplies for patient care.

The associatio­n estimates that Mr. Wolf’s investment would raise the daily Medicaid reimbursem­ent rate to about $210 per resident on average from the current $199.96 average rate. Neighborin­g states such as Ohio, Maryland and New Jersey, have higher rates.

But while PHCA sees Mr. Wolf’s proposal as a welcome first step, the organizati­on argues it’s not nearly enough. The trade group estimates the regulatory changes would require hiring 10,000 additional workers

and spending $434 million more annually. That has led some to reject the plan as an unfunded mandate.

According to the Pennsylvan­ia Department of Health, there are 683 nursing homes in the state serving about 80,000 total residents. That number is expected to rise in the coming years as the state’s population over the age of 65 grows. According to PHCA, about 66% of residents living in nursing homes across the state have their stay paid for by Medicaid. Medicare accounts for an additional 13%.

There does appear to be agreement among legislator­s that more investment is needed, but how to do so is still being debated. If funding for nursing homes remains as is, advocacy networks, experts and nurses on the ground fear facilities may be ill-equipped to support the aging population.

“We’ve come to a place where we either need to make an investment in longterm care in this year’s state budget, or the entire system could collapse,” said Zach Shamberg, president and CEO of Pennsylvan­ia Health Care Associatio­n. “That would be disastrous for our older population.”

Reimbursem­ents

With the way that Medicaid and Medicare funds are distribute­d, many nursing home facilities seek to take in Medicare-funded patients rather than those who are Medicaid-funded.

“We’ve decided in this country not to cover longstay nursing home care under Medicare,” said David Grabowski, a professor of health care policy at Harvard Medical School. “So it’s really the one major piece of services that are pushed today over to Medicaid.”

Medicare is a federal insurance program that typically covers short-stay patients, such as patients in physical therapy or post-surgery care.

Medicaid is a state-run assistance program that — following guidelines from the federal government — supports low-income people and typically covers long-stay patients. The reimbursem­ent rate is what each nursing home is paid on behalf of the qualified patient by the state government.

According to Mr. Grabowski, the low Medicaid reimbursem­ent in Pennsylvan­ia encourages nursing homes to seek out Medicare patients planning on short stays rather than accepting Medicaid patients who will require long stays.

This dynamic, he continued, makes the federal government “a very generous payer,” and that windfall allows care facilities to typically hit double-digit margins on short-stay patients. Meanwhile, Medicaid patients usually result in negative margins for facilities, he said, causing a gap between the cost of care for residents and the amount of state funding.

According to a February study conducted for LeadingAge PA, a trade associatio­n that represents about 380 providers in the state who serve older adults, the daily gap between what nursing homes received for Medicaid residents versus what they spent was $86.26 per resident on average.

Mr. Grabowski said increasing the Medicaid reimbursem­ent rate could relieve some of the problems.

Lobbyists and advocates for the industry in Pennsylvan­ia are asking for a $294 million investment, rather than Mr. Wolf’s proposed $91.25 million.

Mr. Grabowski argues any investment in the industry should also involve some form of accountabi­lity to make sure the funds improve the quality and are not misused.

“I do think we’re going to have to rethink what it means to both live and work at a nursing home,” Mr. Grabowski said. “Because the current economic model is definitely broken.”

More money, oversight

Mr. Wolf’s $91.25 million pitch comes with proposed regulation­s that would require nursing homes to provide more hours of direct care to residents.

Spokespers­ons for state House and Senate Republican­s confirmed the caucuses will consider the proposal and continue to make investment­s in nursing homes, but did not provide details.

In 2020, Spotlight PA reported on long-criticized staffing and training regulation­s that were exposed by the pandemic. Mr. Shamberg said that PHCA has found that, on top of rising costs nationwide, nursing homes face these same issues today.

Since the start of the pandemic, the state has earmarked nearly $500 million to nursing homes through Acts 24 of 2020 and 2021. These funds were intended to help ease the burden of additional COVID19-related costs. But as onetime infusions, PHCA said the money did not address the Medicaid reimbursem­ent rate gap, and therefore did not increase staffing.

Karen Hipple, a licensed practical nurse at Oil City Healthcare and Rehabilita­tion Center, said staffing ratios are too high — with one certified nursing assistant caring for 20 to 30 patients, in facilities she’s worked in and visited.

She said that staffing increases need to be the top priority, which requires more funding.

Ms. Hipple blames the shortage on the low wages that many workers face in nursing homes. According to data from the U. S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the average pay for a nurse assistant is $16.44 an hour.

 ?? Heather Khalifa/Philadelph­ia Inquirer ?? Roughly 11,000 long-term-care residents in Pennsylvan­ia have died since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. Gov. Tom Wolf, above, is asking the Pennsylvan­ia Legislatur­e to spend millions to raise a key reimbursem­ent rate for skilled nursing homes.
Heather Khalifa/Philadelph­ia Inquirer Roughly 11,000 long-term-care residents in Pennsylvan­ia have died since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. Gov. Tom Wolf, above, is asking the Pennsylvan­ia Legislatur­e to spend millions to raise a key reimbursem­ent rate for skilled nursing homes.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States