The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

AG slams legal shield for nursing homes, hospitals

- By MARINA VILLENEUVE

ALBANY, N.Y. » New York’s attorney general has joined calls for the state to loosen a partial immunity from lawsuits and criminal prosecutio­ns it had granted to nursing homes at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic last spring.

In a report issued Thursday, Attorney General Letitia James, a Democrat, documented how a number of homes failed to follow proper infection-control protocols as the virus raged.

Patients with COVID-19 were mingled in some homes with residents who didn’t yet have the virus. Staff members weren’t properly screened for illness. Some homes made sick employees keep coming to work, even though they could potentiall­y infect others on the job. Others maintained dangerousl­y low staffing levels that endangered residents, the report found.

Yet despite those “disturbing and potentiall­y unlawful findings,” James said, “It remains unclear to what extent facilities or individual­s can be held accountabl­e if found to have failed to ap

propriatel­y protect the residents in their care.”

Nursing homes, hospitals and other health care facilities in New York were granted one of the broadest legal protection­s from both lawsuits and criminal prosecutio­ns in the nation by the state’s lawmakers last spring. The health care industry’s well-heeled lobbyists said they drafted the provision in the state budget to protect hospitals and nursing homes stretched to the limits, with volunteers and medical students caring for patients in makeshift hospitals.

Lawmakers partially rolled back that immunity last summer, saying it would no longer apply to suits or prosecutio­ns over non-COVID-19 patients. It has never applied to instances of gross negligence, intentiona­l criminal or reckless misconduct.

But they left in place provisions that protect certain health care providers from being sued or prosecuted over care “related to the diagnosis or treatment of COVID-19.”

James called for New York to eliminate the immunity provisions, particular­ly as they applied to nursing homes that knowingly took on more patients than their staffs could safely handle.

“While it is reasonable to provide some protection­s for health care workers making impossible health care decisions in good faith during an unpreceden­ted public health crisis, it would not be appropriat­e or just for nursing homes owners to interpret this action as providing blanket immunity for causing harm to residents,” she said.

Her criticism comes as a group of Republican and Democratic state lawmakers are pushing for the Legislatur­e to pass a bill to repeal the immunity provision.

Assemblyme­mber Ron Kim, a Queens Democrat, introduced a bill Tuesday to repeal remaining legal protection­s for nursing homes and allow families to file retroactiv­e lawsuits.

“The governor handed out blanket immunity to corporate executives which cost lives and brought undue pain and suffering,” Kim said. “It is a business model soaked in blood.”

Stephen Hanse, president of the New York State Center for Assisted Living and the New York State Health Facilities Associatio­n, which represents many of the state’s for-profit nursing homes, said those kinds of allegation­s were unfair and untrue.

He said the current protection­s for nursing homes apply only in limited circumstan­ces and are “necessary and balanced.”

“They do not protect any health care provider or worker in instances of willful or intentiona­l criminal misconduct, gross negligence, reckless misconduct or intentiona­l infliction of harm,” Hanse said.

“Not a single facility,” he said, put “profit before the needs of their residents.”

And if there was any instance that a provider was doing that, “the attorney general has and the Department of Health have the authority notwithsta­nding this law to pursue actions against those providers.”

Syracuse University College of Law professor Nina Kohn said the state’s current law does protect nursing homes in ways that might encourage bad choices about staffing and patient protection­s.

“If they’re not going to be held accountabl­e for harm to residents and they’re going to be paid either way, you’ll have a certain percentage of facilities who made the business decision to engage in practices that unreasonab­ly endanger the resident,” Kohn said.

“They’re accepting residents in many cases knowing they have staffing shortages, knowing they’re not equipped to meet their needs,” she added.

State health inspectors have found safety shortcomin­gs at dozens of New York nursing homes, including basic infection-control violations like failing to have staff wear masks or wash their hands, according to records and state officials.

New York state Department of Health has issued 140 infection-control citations and more than a dozen “immediate jeopardy” citations to nursing homes during the pandemic, according to department spokespers­on Jill Montag.

Montag said the department has collected more than $1.1 million in fines.

“Violations of these protocols is inexcusabl­e and operators will be held accountabl­e,” state Health Commission­er Howard Zucker said.

At least 12,743 nursing home residents died of the virus as of Jan. 19, the state revealed Thursday.

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