Las Vegas Review-Journal

Nursing homes still struggling after COVID

- Ned Barnett Ned Barnett is a columnist for Charlotte (N.C.) Observer.

In the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic, the nation’s attention focused on the brutal toll the virus took on those in nursing homes.

Those residents were the most vulnerable — older, sicker and living in close quarters. In the first year of the pandemic, nearly 1 in every 10 people living in a nursing home died from COVID.

Those deaths turned a spotlight on a corner of health care usually in the shadows. It exposed the neglect of residents, the lack of staff, the low pay for aides, weak government oversight and the callousnes­s of some owners who milked nursing homes for profits at the expense of decent care.

One hoped-for result of the exposure was that there would be a state and national effort to provide better care for the elderly. But as the fourth anniversar­y of the pandemic arrives, nursing homes — and long-term care facilities in general — have seen little change.

“The things we are concerned about now are holdovers from before the pandemic,” said Bill Lamb of Friends of Residents in Long Term Care, an independen­t, nonprofit organizati­on.

“The pandemic laid bare all the weaknesses,” he said. “We had that attention, but it has been harder to sustain.”

Federal and state nursing home funding has improved, but given the underfundi­ng in the past and recent inflation, nursing homes still struggle to provide quality care. In some ways, conditions are more challengin­g because the strong post-pandemic economy has made it harder to hire and keep aides and nurses. And COVID is still around.

Labor shortages affecting nursing homes are not confined to the homes themselves. High vacancy rates within several states’ department of health and human services are hindering nursing home inspection­s and limiting government’s ability to respond to residents’ complaints. The problem is exacerbate­d in places that have failed to spend more on public employees, and specifical­ly public health workers.

The North Carolina DHHS explained in a statement that: “Retention and recruitmen­t of nursing home inspectors has been especially challengin­g due to low wages, the required travel and significan­t and stressful workload. … This means a smaller workforce is struggling to respond to a growing number of complaints and severity of deficienci­es found in nursing homes.”

The department, which logged 3,484 complaints about nursing homes in 2022, said: “Without additional investigat­ors and more funding to increase the pay for existing and future nursing home investigat­ors, DHSR’S ability to timely survey nursing homes and investigat­e complaints will continue to worsen.”

Compoundin­g the problems of low funding for nursing operations and their oversight has been a rise in private equity firms. The firms often cut quality to boost profits from Medicare and Medicaid funding.

Lamb said improving nursing homes is impeded by a shortage of labor and a lack of clarity about where the money already being spent is ending up.

“We would advocate for more regulators,” he said, “but we can’t fill the positions we already have.”

Meanwhile, Lamb said, pumping more money into the system may not help if it goes toward profits instead of patient care. “There needs to be more transparen­cy and accountabi­lity about how the public dollars are actually used in facilities,” he said.

Four years after COVID compelled the public to see the shame of how the nation treats its oldest and most vulnerable citizens, nursing home care and its oversight may actually be worse. The government and voters should insist that we make it better.

 ?? NATHAN HOWARD ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE (2022) ?? Tina Sandri, CEO of Forest Hills of DC senior living facility, left, helps a resident back to her room at the facility in Washington, D.C. COVID-19 tore through nursing homes, with nearly 1 in 10 residents dying. Despite U.S. efforts to improve conditions, the facilities are still struggling to provide adequate care.
NATHAN HOWARD ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE (2022) Tina Sandri, CEO of Forest Hills of DC senior living facility, left, helps a resident back to her room at the facility in Washington, D.C. COVID-19 tore through nursing homes, with nearly 1 in 10 residents dying. Despite U.S. efforts to improve conditions, the facilities are still struggling to provide adequate care.

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