Las Vegas Review-Journal

Nursing home abuses unreported

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6,600 cases reflected potential neglect or abuse that was not reported as required. Nearly 6,200 patients were affected.

“Mandatory reporting is not always happening, and beneficiar­ies deserve to be better protected,” said Gloria Jarmon, head of the inspector general’s audit division.

Overall, unreported cases worked out to 18 percent of about 37,600 episodes in which a Medicare beneficiar­y was taken to the emergency room from a nursing facility in circumstan­ces that raised red flags.

Responding to the report, Administra­tor Seema Verma said the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services does not tolerate abuse and mistreatme­nt and slaps significan­t fines on nursing homes that fail to report cases.

Verma said the agency, known as CMS, is already moving to improve supervisio­n of nursing homes in critical areas such as abuse and neglect and care for patients with dementia.

CMS officially agreed with the inspector general’s recommenda­tions, including clearer guidance to nursing facilities about what kinds of episodes must be reported, improved training for facility staff, and requiremen­ts that state nursing home inspectors record and track possible problems as well as incidents reported to law enforcemen­t.

The report cited the example of a 65-year-old woman who arrived at the emergency room in critical condition. She was struggling to breathe, suffering from kidney failure and in a state of delirium. The patient turned out to have opioid poisoning, due to an error at the nursing facility. The report said a nurse made a mistake copying doctor’s orders, and the patient was getting much bigger doses of pain medication as a result. The woman was treated and sent back to the same nursing facility.

The nurse got remedial training, but the facility did not report what happened.

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