The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Wolf, nursing homes come to agreement to boost staff

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HARRISBURG » Nursing home trade associatio­ns said Monday they have come to an agreement to boost staffing levels at the facilities along with legislatio­n newly signed by Gov. Tom Wolf to boost aid to an industry wracked by the COVID-19 pandemic and struggling with high staff turnover.

With Pennsylvan­ia awash in surplus tax collection­s, Wolf on Monday signed legislatio­n authorizin­g nearly $300 million a year in additional Medicaid reimbursem­ents for nursing homes, or nearly 20% more.

That followed trade associatio­ns working out a compromise on staffing levels with Wolf’s administra­tion and SEIU Healthcare Pennsylvan­ia, a labor union that represents about 5,000 nursing home workers.

“This is a major step forward for Pennsylvan­ia’s long-term care industry,” Wolf told a Capitol news conference after signing the legislatio­n.

Officials say the money should boost worker salaries, staffing levels and retention while stabilizin­g the facilities’ finances and improving the quality of care.

The Medicaid reimbursem­ent rate increase is the first in almost a decade in a state with one of the largest nursing home population­s, trade associatio­ns said.

The trade associatio­ns had pushed hard for a rate increase, saying some facilities were closing or downsizing because they lose money on each Medicaidco­vered resident.

But they also fought Wolf’s initial proposal last year to force them to boost direct care hours by 50%.

The agreement provides a modest increase in direct care hours — from 2.7 to 2.87 per patient per day — but sets minimum shift ratios for nurses and nursing assistants to patients.

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