USA TODAY International Edition

Lawmaker urges nursing home probe

Rush calls out ‘ profiteering, cold- hearted’ owners and asks Congress to act

- Jayme Fraser and Nick Penzenstad­ler

In a biting letter, U. S. Rep. Bobby Rush, D- Ill. urged Congress to investigat­e the failures of nursing homes during the pandemic, particular­ly “profiteering, cold- hearted” corporatio­ns that act as landlords in the industry.

“It is up to Congress … to shine a bright light on the current practices, to reign ( sic) them in, and to set and strictly enforce high standards for performanc­e,” Rush wrote to the chair of the House Oversight Committee. “It is Congress’s job to stand in- between greedy corporatio­ns and those who are the most defenseles­s.”

The request cited a USA TODAY investigat­ion into nursing home ownership webs invisible to consumers and regulators. The reporting focused on one large operating chain that has an unusual financial partnershi­p with its real estate investors.

USA TODAY’s investigat­ion and a consumer complaint triggered Indiana’s attorney general to review Trilogy Health Services’ reported COVID- 19 deaths and billing records.

In a report released this week, the National Academies of Sciences, Engineerin­g, and Medicine called for federal officials to expand the government’s tracking and regulation of nursing home companies.

Increased scrutiny of nursing homes comes as the White House prepares to use executive authority to tighten industry regulation­s. Those proposals include setting the first nationwide minimum staffing requiremen­ts and expanding regulatory authority to crack down on corporate owners with track records of poor performanc­e.

When USA TODAY investigat­ed COVID- 19 deaths at the country’s largest nursing home chains during the deadliest peak of the pandemic, Trilogy Health Services stood out for reporting the highest death rate to the federal government, twice the national average. The company filed a revision to reduce its official count of COVID- 19 deaths by more than 40%, but its rate remains one of the highest among large chains.

In Indiana, one of four Midwest states where Trilogy operates nursing homes, Attorney General Todd Rokita said in a statement that “the families of those who are affected deserve answers.” He called on the state health department to investigat­e Trilogy to supplement his office’s review.

“I hope the Indiana Department of Health will lead that effort and audit the data it received from hospitals and health care providers,” he wrote.

Officials from that department did not respond to questions from USA TODAY, but spokeswoma­n Megan WadeTaxter said in a statement that its staff and partners worked “throughout the pandemic to ensure the data presented to Hoosiers is accurate and timely.”

A majority of Trilogy’s buildings in Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan and Ohio are owned by a real estate investment trust, American Healthcare REIT. In addition to collecting rent, American Healthcare shares profits from Trilogy’s operations – a model allowed under a federal law revised in 2008.

This arrangemen­t could yield more profits in good times but exposes the company to more financial risks, which could create incentives to cut back on care. Rush told USA TODAY that REITs should not be allowed to own nursing homes and collect profits from their operations. The congressma­n has for years advocated for more staffing at nursing homes to increase the quality of care.

“If they own the real estate, then they should not be given the authority to run

or operate these nursing homes and shouldn’t be getting one red cent of the taxpayers’ money in operating these nursing homes,” Rush said, calling it the duty of Congress to “draw the line in the sand.”

Rep. Diana DeGette, D- Colo., chair of the House Oversight Committee, shares Rush’s concerns, said spokesman Ryan Brown, and has asked Rep. Frank Pallone, D- N. J., to add it to the agenda of the Energy and Commerce Committee.

REITs are a financial vehicle for real estate investment­s that are exempt from corporate income taxes, like mutual funds, as long as most income is paid out to investors as dividends. The concept has become another way to make money from health care.

Typically, REITs are landlords that collect rent from companies operating inside its buildings. Since 2008, a law passed by Congress has allowed health care REITs to profit from operations inside their property as well.

A USA TODAY analysis of ownership data compiled by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, which regulates nursing homes, reveals how little federal officials know about REIT involvemen­t with nursing homes.

That data reveals only about 500 facilities nationwide as being owned by one of the major, publicly traded REITs or American Healthcare, which is not publicly traded. By contrast, USA TODAY has identified about 1,800 such facilities – one in nine nursing homes.

American Healthcare had the highest reported death rate among seven large REITs during the coronaviru­s surge of late 2020 and early 2021, according to USA TODAY’s analysis of COVID- 19 data nursing homes were required to report weekly. That analysis looked at operating chains and at the REITs that own many of their facilities.

American Healthcare was one of three REITs with a reported death rate above the national average during the weeks reviewed, and Trilogy’s revisions dropped it to second- highest.

Trilogy declined to identify specific reasons for its deletions of deaths since USA TODAY published its investigat­ion, which appears on the public CMS website. U. S. nursing homes averaged 3.3 deaths per thousand residents each week from October 2020 through February 2021. Trilogy’s initial reports revealed seven deaths per thousand residents, and its revised figures show 3.9 deaths per thousand.

Representa­tives of CMS and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention told USA TODAY they are not reviewing the changes to the self- reported data, which nursing homes can correct at any time.

Damon Elder, a spokesman for Trilogy Health Services and American Healthcare REIT, declined a request to speak with company officials about the review in Indiana and the call for a congressio­nal hearing looking at nursing home ownership.

The industry associatio­n representi­ng for- profit nursing homes, the American Health Care Associatio­n, said it supports efforts to improve the quality of care but questions some of the suggested changes.

Public records show the group spent $ 3.7 million lobbying the government in 2021. It ranked third in the hospital and nursing home sector behind the American Hospital Associatio­n and Children’s Hospital Associatio­n, according to reports compiled by OpenSecret­s.

LeadingAge, which represents nonprofit homes, spent less than $ 200,000, according to disclosure reports.

The larger associatio­n of for- profit nursing homes dismissed the potential impact of changes that focus on particular business models or expand regulatory oversight to include corporate owners. The group argued the focus should be on increasing Medicaid reimbursem­ent rates for care.

“It is the lack of adequate government support for long term care that policymake­rs should be examining,” the associatio­n said in a statement. “Because of this public policy failure, some nursing homes have been forced to look for other private investment opportunit­ies in order to keep their doors open.”

Academic researcher­s and the Na

tional Academies’ report note that savvy corporate owners can use a variety of related businesses to draw money out of nursing homes. An individual facility may appear unprofitable to federal regulators even as an owner earns profits. Financial moves can help companies minimize their taxes but make it difficult for government­s to understand how the tax dollars spent on care are used.

Ashvin Gandhi, a UCLA health economist who studies private investment in nursing homes, said it is difficult to know which changes will improve the quality of nursing home care because the government does not have a complete understand­ing of the business structures and financial incentives that drive decisions.

“It is an extremely important part of the health care system that serves some of the most vulnerable population­s,” he said. “It’s important that given the extremely large public investment­s we make in this care that we understand what we’re buying with our money.”

CMS officials told USA TODAY this year that they evaluate nursing home performanc­e only at the facility level and do not track outcomes by operating chain or the tangle of business interests involved in real estate or services.

“We are actively looking to improve,” said Jonathan Blum, principal deputy administra­tor at CMS, said in January.

In its new report, the National Academies urged federal officials to expand the government’s tracking and regulation of companies that own nursing homes and their properties “to avoid a repeat of the failures that occurred during the COVID- 19 pandemic,” according to a news release.

Budgets for staffing, supplies and other needs often are set by corporate owners rather than individual nursing homes, which might limit the impact of regulating at the facility level. The National Academies report suggests that expanding CMS’ regulatory authority to include the corporate chain might make enforcemen­t more effective.

Betty Ferrell, who chaired the panel that wrote the report, said the U. S. nursing home system is “ineffective, inefficien­t, fragmented and unsustaina­ble.”

Ferrell, director of nursing research and education at City of Hope Medical Center, called for action, saying, “We must stop viewing nursing home residents as ‘ them’ – they are our grandparen­ts, parents, friends, siblings and veterans.”

“If ( REITs) own the real estate, then they should not be given the authority ... and shouldn’t be getting one red cent of the taxpayers’ money in operating these nursing homes.” Rep. Bobby Rush, D- Ill.

 ?? USA TODAY ?? This senior living facility in North Carolina went above and beyond so veterans could see their families after months apart. The coronaviru­s pandemic put a spotlight on the workings of nursing homes nationwide.
USA TODAY This senior living facility in North Carolina went above and beyond so veterans could see their families after months apart. The coronaviru­s pandemic put a spotlight on the workings of nursing homes nationwide.

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