Lodi News-Sentinel

A worker shortage is driving U.S. nursing homes to the brink of collapse

- Lauren ColemanLoc­hner, Martin Z Braun

Chippewa Manor’s beds could be full. The nursing and rehabilita­tion home is seeing plenty of demand from potential patients, after two nearby facilities recently closed. But there’s one problem: There’s no one to care for residents.

Staffing has always been a challenge, but “it’s reached a boiling point” in the last six months, said Jill Gengler, the president of the northwest Wisconsin facility. The home has struggled to find nurses, laundry, maintenanc­e, housekeepi­ng and food-service workers. Raising the wage for certified nursing assistants to $17 an hour from $12 has brought in some new staffers, but the pay rate is “not sustainabl­e.”

As a result, Chippewa Manor is turning away other possible clients who might bolster revenue that would help fund higher pay.

It all spells disaster for U.S. nursing homes, an industry that was under financial pressure even before the pandemic. Declining enrollment and higher labor and supply costs have forced 327 nursing homes to shut down since 2020, and more than 400, or about 3% of certified homes in the U.S., are at risk of closing this year, according to the American Health Care Associatio­n, an industry lobbying group.

“The industry itself is on the brink of collapse,” said David Gordon, who leads the distressed health-care practice at law firm Polsinelli.

The coming upheaval will also weigh on the socalled sandwich generation, those squeezed between caring for their children and aging parents, often while juggling their own careers. More than half of adults over 65 will need care for serious disabiliti­es, according to a government report, and the U.S. Census Bureau expects that older adults will outnumber children by 2034 for the first time ever.

Thin margins

The median occupancy rate at skilled nursing facilities, historical­ly around 90%, is forecasted to be 77% for the year, according to a March report from AHCA. And most homes are losing money, with an expected median operating margin of negative 4.8%.

That’s a huge difference from the strongest financiall­y performing nursing homes that saw up to 10% returns before the pandemic, said John Tishler, who specialize­s in transactio­ns involving distressed and bankrupt health-care facilities at Nashville law firm Waller Lansden Dortch & Davis.The pandemic revealed and amplified longexisti­ng shortcomin­gs at the more than 15,000 nursing homes in the U.S., such as inadequate staffing, poor infection control and regulatory failures, according to an April report from the National Academy of Sciences. As of last month, more than 150,000 nursing home residents and 2,362 workers had died from COVID-19, according to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid.

While buyers in the space come in “thinking they can build a better mousetrap,” the complexity and economic pressures along with a move toward more home care will likely lead to more restructur­ings and closures similar to the wave that followed the 2008 recession — with the most trouble concentrat­ed in privately owned facilities, said Thad Wilson, a restructur­ing lawyer at King & Spalding.

Even in normal times, experts say, there needs to be a rethinking of how the facilities are financed.

“All of the reimbursem­ent systems are inadequate across the board,” said Suzanne Koenig, a nursing home turnaround expert and head of SAK Management Services who has served as a receiver and Chapter 11 trustee in bankruptcy cases. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services’ proposed 4.6% Medicare reimbursem­ent cut next year would affect payments that cover shorter-term rehab patients, who account for a significan­t portion of nursing home stays. Medicaid, meanwhile, funds most longterm care.

About 70% of nursing homes in the U.S. are owned by for-profit operators, including large chains, smaller investor groups, momand-pops, and increasing­ly, private-equity firms, who have been a driving force in the consolidat­ion of a still-fragmented industry.

Publicly financed facilities — and their creditors — have their own issues, too. Municipal bonds issued for nonprofit owners of senior living facilities, including nursing homes, make up almost 75% of the $560 million municipal bond defaults this year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Last year, $1.1 billion of those bonds defaulted, accounting for 60% of defaults in the municipal bond market.

Complicati­ng the situation is the scattered nature of bondholder­s when publicly financed facilities need to restructur­e, Polsinelli’s Gordon said, making negotiatin­g and reaching an agreement difficult even when there are willing buyers. That means that some facilities that might have been saved end up closing.

The goal for bankrupt facilities is usually to sell to a new operator, but that isn't always possible, or a buyer doesn't want all the locations.

Worker exodus

As nursing homes struggle to operate in the black, proposed rules from the White House meant to improve care include new requiremen­ts on staffing levels that could present another obstacle for an industry already struggling to find workers.

Roughly 236,000 caregivers, or 15% of the nursing home workforce, left the sector since the start of the pandemic through February, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Burned-out workers are not being tempted by raises. Their wages jumped 19% between January 2020 and January 2022, BLS data show. But other industries have raised pay, too.

“You can go work at the Walmart down the street and get paid more and not deal with COVID all day,” Gordon said.

For rural facilities, the situation is even more urgent. Like rural hospitals, they’re often located in areas with stagnant or declining population­s.

“It’s going to take more than wages,” said David Grabowski, a professor of health-care policy at Harvard Medical School.

 ?? DREAMSTIME/TNS ?? Declining enrollment and higher labor and supply costs spell disaster for U.S. nursing homes, an industry that was under financial pressure even before the pandemic.
DREAMSTIME/TNS Declining enrollment and higher labor and supply costs spell disaster for U.S. nursing homes, an industry that was under financial pressure even before the pandemic.

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