El Dorado News-Times

Secrecy won’t help hold nursing homes accountabl­e for their emergency plans

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It was a tragedy and an embarrassm­ent for Louisiana last summer when the state had to swoop in and rescue

OpiniOn more than 800 nursing home residents who had been evacuated to a Tangipahoa Parish warehouse in advance of Hurricane Ida.

Generators had failed in the sweltering summer heat, trash was piled everywhere and residents were left lying in their own feces and urine. Fifteen people died in the aftermath.

Bob Dean, known for operating low-rated nursing homes, had moved 843 residents of seven homes to the warehouse.

The Louisiana Health Department knew of the evacuation because nursing homes are required to submit hurricane emergency plans to the state.

There ought to be a law to prevent this sort of thing from happening again, and now Gov. John Bel Edwards’ administra­tion has proposed one.

House Bill 993, by state Rep. Joe Stagni, R-Kenner, would require nursing homes to submit an “after-event report” every time they evacuate or have complicati­ons while sheltering in place during a natural disaster.

Louisiana is a magnet for powerful storms and every one presents different challenges, so the reports would be useful to the industry, to state regulators and to family members.

But the reports would be exempt from public disclosure, so families looking for a safe place to send their loved ones wouldn’t be able to evaluate how well operators protect and care for vulnerable residents when hurricanes strike.

This secrecy is unnecessar­y, since sensitive details like patient names and medical conditions can be redacted. Yet it’s hardly surprising to see Democratic and Republican politician­s looking after the interests of the politicall­y powerful nursing home industry, rather than their own constituen­ts.

Who says bipartisan­ship is dead in Baton Rouge?

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