Albuquerque Journal

Comparing nursing homes

New website offers ‘star ratings’ to measure the quality of a range of services for residents

- BY JUDITH GRAHAM

For the first time, the federal government is shining a spotlight on the quality of rehabilita­tion care at nursing homes — services used by nearly 2 million older adults each year.

Medicare’s Nursing Home Compare website now includes a “star rating” (a composite measure of quality) for rehab services — skilled nursing care and physical, occupation­al or speech therapy for people recovering from a hospitaliz­ation. The site also breaks out 13 measures of the quality of rehab care, offering a more robust view of facilities’ performanc­e.

Independen­t experts and industry representa­tives welcomed the changes, saying they could help seniors make better decisions about where to seek care after a hospital stay. This matters because high-quality care can help older adults regain the ability to live independen­tly, while low-quality care can compromise seniors’ recovery.

“It’s a very positive move,” said David Grabowski, a professor of health care policy at Harvard Medical School. He noted that previous ratings haven’t distinguis­hed between two groups in nursing homes with different characteri­stics and needs — temporary residents getting short-term rehabilita­tion and permanent residents

too ill or frail to live independen­tly.

Temporary residents are trying to regain the ability to care for themselves and return home as soon as possible, he noted. By contrast, permanent residents aren’t expecting improvemen­ts: Their goal is to maintain the best quality of life.

Three separate ratings for the quality of residents’ care now appear on the Nursing Home Compare website: one for overall quality (a composite measure); another one for “short-stay” patients (people who reside in facilities for 100 days or less, getting skilled nursing services and physical, occupation­al or speech therapy); and a third for “longstay” patients (people who reside in facilities for more than 100 days).

Ratings for short-stay patients — available for 13,799 nursing homes — vary considerab­ly, according to a Kaiser Health News analysis of data published by the government in late April. Nationally, 30% of nursing homes with a rating received five stars, the highest possible. Another 21% got a fourstar rating, signifying above-average care. Twenty percent got three stars, an average performanc­e. Seventeen percent got two stars, a worse-than-average score. And 13% got one star, a bottom-of-thebarrel score. (Altogether, 1,764 nursing homes did not receive ratings for shortstay patients.)

Here’s informatio­n about how to find and use the new Nursing Home Compare data, as well as insights from Kaiser Health News’ analysis:

Finding data about rehabilita­tion. Enter your geographic location on Nursing Home Compare’s home page and a list of facilities will come up. You can select three at a time to review. Once you’ve done so, hit the “compare now” button at the top of the list. (To see more facilities, you’ll need to repeat the process.)

A new page will appear with several tabs. Click on the one marked “quality of resident care.” The three overall star ratings described above will appear for the facilities you’ve selected.

Below this informatio­n, two options are listed on the left side: “short-stay residents” and “long-stay residents.” Click on “short-stay residents.” Now you’ll see 13 measures with actual numbers included (most, but not all, of the time), as well as state and national averages.

Understand­ing the star rating. Six measures are used to calculate star ratings for the quality of rehab care for short-stay patients. Two of them concern emergency room visits and rehospital­izations, potential indicators of problemati­c care. Another two examine how well pain was controlled and bedsores were managed. One measure looks at how many patients became better able to move around on their own, an important element of recovery. Yet another examines the rate at which antipsycho­tic medication­s were newly prescribed. (These drugs can have significan­t side effects and are not recommende­d for older adults with dementia.)

One measure of great interest to seniors is the percentage of residents who successful­ly return home after a short nursing home stay. But actual numbers aren’t available on the Nursing Home Compare website this time around: Instead, facilities are listed as below average, average or above average. The national average, reported in April, was 48.6%, indicating room for improvemen­t.

Tracking variations in performanc­e. Some facilities outperform others by large margins on measures of quality of care for short-stay residents. And some facilities have high scores in some areas, but not in others.

For instance, the nursing home at Westminste­r Village, a high-end continuing care retirement community in Scottsdale, Arizona, had the highest score for rehospital­izations — 39.9% — out of 68 facilities in and around Phoenix. (By contrast, the lowest score in the Phoenix area was 15.4% and the state average was 23.5%.) It also had the highest rate of helping residents improve their ability to move around on their own — 88.6%. (The lowest score was 37.6% and the state average was 63.6%.)

In an email, Lesley Midkiff, marketing director at Westminste­r Village, said that the facility’s staff is vigilant about sending residents back to the hospital if health issues arise. At the same time, she said, staffers “push the residents just enough to regain independen­ce and recover quickly from their shortterm stays.” Both priorities have the “residents’ best interest” in mind, she said.

If a facility has an average or low quality score, Dr. David Gifford, a senior vice president at the American Health Care Associatio­n, a nursing home industry group, recommende­d that people look closely at various measures and try to figure out where the institutio­n fell short. Call the facility and ask them to explain, he said. Also, review Nursing Home Compare’s informatio­n about staffing and health inspection­s, Gifford suggested, and visit the facility if possible.

Variations within nursing homes. The newly published Nursing Home Compare data also show that institutio­ns aren’t always equally adept at caring for shortand long-stay residents.

 ?? SOURCE: DREAMSTIME ?? How to find and use new federal ratings for rehab services at nursing homes.
SOURCE: DREAMSTIME How to find and use new federal ratings for rehab services at nursing homes.

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