Miami Herald (Sunday)

Nursing home operators push for staffing rules to be relaxed

- BY KIRBY WILSON AND HANNAH CRITCHFIEL­D kwilson@tampabay.com hcritchfie­ld@tampabay.com Herald/Times Tallahasse­e Bureau aceballos@miamiheral­d.com dovalle@miamiheral­d.com

TALLAHASSE­E

The bill was written by the nursing home industry, but that’s not the end of the story.

That was the assurance given by Sen. Ben Albritton, R-Wauchula, the lawmaker backing

Senate Bill 804 — which would make substantia­l changes to the way the state regulates nursing home staffing levels. Albritton pledged he would work to bring all parties with a vested interest to the table to compromise on the industry-backed legislatio­n. Rep. Lauren Melo, R-Naples, who sponsored similar legislatio­n, House Bill 1239, would do the same.

Now, two amended versions of the bills are making their way through the House and Senate. It appears the lawmakers have built some consensus. The nursing home industry and the trial lawyers who sue those facilities on behalf of residents and their families now both support the bill.

But groups that directly represent people who live and work inside nursing homes continue to vehemently oppose the legislatio­n. The

AARP in a press release called the House bill “irresponsi­ble” and “unconscion­able.” The group predicted the bills, if passed, would make people suffer from inadequate care.

The amended measures would:

Reduce the minimum number of hours certified nursing assistants (CNAs) are required to spend caring for each

ATALLAHASS­EE

Last year, a massage therapist named Ismael Gonzalez was arrested after a client at a West Miami-Dade spa told

nursing home resident by half an hour, to two hours daily. Other types of “direct care” employees — such as occupation­al therapists, mental health counselors and feeding assistants — would now be able to count towards the remaining half-hour of care an individual must receive daily under state law.

Add provisions that make it easier to obtain money won from longterm care facilities in a lawsuit over substandar­d care, ensuring that anyone who takes ownership of a nursing home with an unpaid judgment becomes responsibl­e for paying it. The bills would also prevent a facility from using proof that they met minimum staff standards as sufficient evidence in court that they adequately cared for a resident.

Give the Agency for Health Care Administra­tion new discretion (under the Senate version of the bill) over whether it will stop facilities from admitting new patients if they fail to meet staffing requiremen­ts. Currently,

AAnursing homes that are ill-staffed for two consecutiv­e days must bar new admissions until employee levels improve.

At a spate of recent committee meetings in the Legislatur­e, labor unions and patient advocates have sparred with the bills’ sponsors and with the nursing home industry over the contention that the bills would make patients less safe.

Supporters say the amendments strike a balance: They increase a resident’s capacity to seek justice through the court system should they experience substandar­d care, while attempting to alleviate the burden of staff shortages that have long plagued long-term care facilities statewide.

“We want to make sure we’re meeting our residents’ needs with the staff that’s best suited for their psycho-social, physical care,” said Kristen Knapp, spokespers­on for the Florida Health Care Associatio­n, which represents over 80% of the state’s nursing homes and whose lobbyists helped write the original legislatio­n — a practice that is not unpreceden­ted in Tallahasse­e. “And you’ve got these layers of accountabi­lity that are going to help ensure that.”

Florida has been considered a leader in staffing standards since 2001, when lawmakers dramatical­ly increased the number of hours nurses and nursing assistants must spend caring for each resident daily.

In the wake of a pandemic that spotlighte­d the connection between infection control and sufficient staffing, other states have recently passed laws raising nursing staff minimums in their facilities.

But nursing home industry leaders say the needs of the residents in their care have changed in the last two decades — alleging many require less care from nursing staff and increased time with more specialize­d employees.

Patient advocates disagree.

An independen­t University of South Florida study, conducted on behalf of the state in 2009, found that quality of care substantia­lly improved in facilities statewide after the introducti­on of the 2001 law bolstering nursing assistant standards.

“Not even a year after we enacted [2001 minimum staff standards], we saw a downward trajectory [of] citations and complaints,” said Rep. Carlos Guillermo Smith, D-Orlando, at a Monday House committee meeting, citing the research. “Rolling this back by a half an hour is going to have dramatic consequenc­es.”

Smith argued the reduction in staffing amounted to a giveaway to a powerful industry.

Tom Parker, director of reimbursem­ent for the Florida Health Care Associatio­n, disagreed, arguing that some nursing homes may actually have higher overall costs as a result of the proposed solution.

”We’re talking about physical therapists, we’re talking about occupation­al therapists, respirator­y therapists — those folks all have a higher salary than CNAs,” Parker said. “So I don’t know what the savings would be, because every building is going to staff differentl­y, depending on the needs of their residents.”

Elder care advocates say the legislatio­n sacrifices resident safety in its effort to improve staffing in nursing homes — forfeiting preventati­ve care measures in favor of retroactiv­e justice.

“This creates more ability to sue after someone has been harmed,” said Zayne Smith, associate state director of advocacy at AARP Florida. “That’s great, but why aren’t we talking about, ‘Let’s prevent the harm from occurring in the first place?’ ”

Melo, the House sponsor of the bill, said she’s been willing to hear out AARP and labor unions over their concerns. But unlike the other parties, those groups have been unwilling to compromise, she said.

“I’ve sat down with both of them and made several suggestion­s asking if they would then support the bill, and I was told no. They are literally, ‘This is what we want. We won’t compromise at all,’ ” Melo said. “Which then leaves you in the future not really having a seat at the table, because you’re not willing to even tell us what you would be satisfied with.”

But Smith of AARP Florida said the organizati­on is willing to concede quite a bit — such as making the moratorium on new resident admissions optional, a change the group previously opposed — as long as the nursing staff requiremen­ts aren’t whittled down.

“No changes to the legislatio­n have been made that include suggestion­s from resident advocates,” said Smith of AARP Florida. “Are we hopeful that there’s room for amendment? Absolutely. But the reality of that actually happening is slim to none.

“Industries like the Florida Health Care Associatio­n are major players in political donations and in PACs,” she added. “We advocate on behalf of the residents and their families that are in nursing homes, but we’re advocating at a deficit — because we don’t offer political contributi­ons.”

As long as proposed legislatio­n includes a decrease in nursing staff standards, it’s unlikely lawmakers will receive the support of either group. In turn, it’s equally implausibl­e that the nursing home industry will back any bill that does not include such a reduction.

Albritton said he’s heard the concerns of resident and labor advocates “loud and clear.”

“I’m going to meet with them, I’m going to listen very closely … and we’re going to talk and see what comes of it,” he said. “At the end of the day, my encouragem­ent lies in that we’ve come so far from where we started with that placeholde­r bill.”

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