The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Unreported nursing home abuse

Audit finds incidents across nation not brought to police, despite law

- By Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar

More than 1 in 4 cases of possible sexual and physical abuse against nursing home patients apparently went unreported to police, according to a government audit that faults Medicare for failing to enforce a federal law requiring immediate notificati­on.

The Health and Human Services inspector general’s office was issuing an “early alert” Monday on its findings from a large sampling of cases in 33 states. Investigat­ors say Medicare needs to take corrective action right away.

“We hope that we can stop this from happening to anybody else,” said Curtis Roy, an audit manager with the inspector general’s office, which investigat­es fraud, waste and abuse in the health care system. The audit is part of a larger ongoing probe, and additional findings are expected, he said.

With some 1.4 million people living in U.S. nursing homes, quality is an ongoing concern. Despite greater awareness, egregious incidents still occur.

Using investigat­ive data analysis techniques, auditors from

the inspector general’s office identified 134 cases in which hospital emergency room records indicated possible sexual or physical abuse, or neglect, of nurs-

ing home residents. The incidents spanned a two-year period from 2015-2016.

Illinois had the largest number of incidents overall, with 17. It was followed by Michigan (13), Texas (9), and California (8). Pennsylvan­ia tied with Kentucky with five incidents in 2016.

In 38 of the total cases

(28 percent), investigat­ors could find no evidence in hospital records that the incident had been reported to local law enforcemen­t, despite a federal law requiring prompt reporting by nursing homes, as well as similar state and local requiremen­ts.

“Based on the records we had available to us, we

could not determine that they had been reported to law enforcemen­t,” said Roy.

The federal statute has been on the books more than five years, but investigat­ors found that Medicare has not enforced its requiremen­t to report incidents to police and other agencies, or risk fines of up to $300,000.

Nursing home personnel must immediatel­y report incidents that involve a suspected crime, within a two-hour window if there’s serious bodily injury. Otherwise, authoritie­s must be notified within 24 hours.

Medicare “has inadequate procedures to ensure

that incidents of potential abuse or neglect of Medicare beneficiar­ies residing in (nursing homes) are identified and reported,” the inspector general’s report said.

In a statement, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services said “nursing home resident safety is our priority and primary focus,” and it is committed “to ensure these vulnerable people are properly cared for, and that all viable or alleged instances involving abuse or neglect are fully investigat­ed and resolved.”

The agency said it has long required nursing homes to immediatel­y re-

port abuse and neglect to state officials, and it will have a formal response to the inspector general’s findings once the audit is complete.

The inspector general is urging Medicare to start systematic­ally scouring computeriz­ed billing records for tell-tale signs of possible abuse of nursing home residents. Investigat­ors used that approach to find the cases, matching emergency room and nursing home records.

Of the 38 unreported cases, 31 involved alleged or suspected rape or sexual abuse, about 4 out of 5.

But even among the 96 cases that were ultimately reported to police, investigat­ors were unable to tell if the federal requiremen­t for “immediate” notificati­on was followed.

In one case classified as “reported to law enforcemen­t,” an elderly woman with verbal and mobility limitation­s was taken to the emergency room after she was allegedly sexually assaulted by a male resident of the same nursing home. The report said two silver-dollar-sized bruises were noted on her right breast.

Nursing home staff had helped the woman bathe and change clothes after the incident. “These actions could have destroyed any evidence that may have been detected using the rape kit,” said the report.

Nursing home employees did not immediatel­y report the incident to police, although the federal reporting requiremen­t was in effect. The nursing home “should have reported the incident to law enforcemen­t within two hours of witnessing the incident,” the report said.

Instead, the following day the nursing home contacted the woman’s family, who called the police, triggering an investigat­ion.

Citing a separate probe by state officials, the inspector general’s report said the nursing home “contacted local law enforcemen­t in an attempt to keep law enforcemen­t from investigat­ing the incident.”

The state’s ow n re - port found that the nursing home told police “we were required to report it but that we were doing our own internal investigat­ion and did not need (police) to make a site visit...no one was interested in pressing charges.” The police continued their investigat­ion.

The state later cited the nursing home for failing to immediatel­y notify the patient’s doctor and family, as well as other violations of federal regulation­s. But state officials classified the incident as resulting in “minimum harm or potential for actual harm.”

No other details were provided in the federal report. The inspector general’s office reported all 134 cases to local police.

The number of nursing home residents is expected to grow in coming years as more people live into their 80s and 90s. Medicaid is the main payer for long-term care, while Medicare covers doctors’ services and hospital care for elderly people and the disabled.

The inspector general is urging Medicare to start systematic­ally scouring computeriz­ed billing records for tell-tale signs of possible abuse of nursing home residents. Investigat­ors used that approach to find the cases, matching emergency room and nursing home records. Of the 38 unreported cases, 31 involved alleged or suspected rape or sexual abuse, about 4 out of 5.

 ?? ALEX BRANDON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? A government audit finds more than 1 in 4 cases of possible sexual and physical abuse against nursing home patients went unreported to police.
ALEX BRANDON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO A government audit finds more than 1 in 4 cases of possible sexual and physical abuse against nursing home patients went unreported to police.

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