The Morning Call

Pennsylvan­ia nursing homes need more funding

- Garry Pezzano Garry Pezzano is president and CEO of LeadingAge PA, a trade associatio­n representi­ng senior housing, health care and community services across the commonweal­th.

It’s been just over two years since the COVID-19 pandemic changed our world forever. Thankfully, life is beginning to resemble a return to normal for many, and it’s wonderful to see.

Families are gathering. Businesses are building back. Mask mandates are ending. Our hospitals are operationa­l again.

This isn’t the case, however, for Pennsylvan­ia’s nursing homes. Providing quality care for those who are most vulnerable to COVID-19 continues to be an everyday struggle.

The chronic underfundi­ng of our nursing homes, coupled with the continued escalating costs of personal protective equipment, testing, wages and operationa­l needs, has left many nursing homes and senior living communitie­s with limited options: close, sell or limit capacity.

That is why a meaningful investment in Medicaid is needed if our senior care communitie­s are to not only survive but thrive.

Gov. Tom Wolf has historical­ly ignored rising costs to provide nursing home care. While he has proposed a $91 million increase in funding in the 2022-23 state budget, it is tied to his administra­tion’s misguided regulatory proposal to increase minimum staffing thresholds by 50%.

Unfortunat­ely, the staffing requiremen­ts are unrealisti­c because nursing homes simply don’t have the funding to either attract potential workers or hire more employees. Even if they did, the workforce crisis, which is impacting many industries, severely limits their ability to fill positions.

One-size-fits-all staffing requiremen­ts also fail to recognize that each nursing home is unique in terms of resident care needs and characteri­stics of the building, among other things.

Even if the governor’s funding proposal came without unrealisti­c ties, gross inequities in Medicaid funding for Pennsylvan­ia nursing homes began long before the pandemic and have continued to escalate.

The Medicaid reimbursem­ent rate has remained nearly stagnant, rising only 1% for half of the commonweal­th’s nursing homes in the 2018-2019 fiscal budget thanks to efforts by the Pennsylvan­ia House and Senate to provide some relief.

A recent study commission­ed by LeadingAge PA found that the Medicaid funding gap for Pennsylvan­ia’s nursing homes nearly doubled from $631 million in 2017-18 to almost $1.2 billion in 2018-19.

How would your family’s budget look if your household expenses doubled but not your salary?

While this shortfall illustrate­s a point-in-time snapshot, this has been a devastatin­g trend. Medicaid funding is intended to cover long-term care costs for those who can no longer afford to pay for it.

As one of the oldest states in the nation, Pennsylvan­ia’s nursing homes care for one of the largest Medicaid population­s in America.

To begin addressing this inequity, LeadingAge PA is calling for state lawmakers to approve a $294 million increase in nursing home Medicaid rates in the 2022-23 state budget. Given the significan­t shortfalls in funding, it can only be considered a deposit in helping Pennsylvan­ia’s nursing homes provide quality care and invest in their workforce.

Without this, nursing homes will continue to reduce the number of beds they dedicate to Medicaid patients, and our commonweal­th’s aging population will have limited access to quality care.

It is time to finally address these issues in meaningful and lasting ways because our seniors deserve better.

Many Pennsylvan­ians have moved on from those dark days of the pandemic. For nursing homes, a great deal of work to overcome COVID-19 remains.

It’s time to provide them with the support they so desperatel­y need.

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 ?? ?? Some nursing homes are struggling to retain and hire employees.
Some nursing homes are struggling to retain and hire employees.

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