The Review

Nursing homes suffer from lack of funding made worse by COVID

- By Adam Marles LeadingAge PA Adam Marles is the president and CEO of LeadingAge PA, trade associatio­n for nonprofit aging services providers.

America is starting to reopen. It’s wonderful to see people reuniting with their loved ones after a year of isolation. Americans are traveling again. Sporting events, like the recent PGA Championsh­ip and NBA playoffs, are welcoming packed crowds. The exuberance at these events is heartwarmi­ng and a testament to the miracle of modern science and medicine that produced the COVID-19 vaccine.

Here in Pennsylvan­ia, over half of all adults have been fully vaccinated. Vaccinatio­ns in all long-term care facilities, including nursing homes, personal care homes and assisted living residences have helped save lives. Our profession­al baseball teams will begin enjoying packed crowds for baseball in June. By any measure, we’re moving forward.

But it’s important for all Pennsylvan­ians, particular­ly Gov. Wolf, state lawmakers and policymake­rs, to understand that the pandemic will continue to be a threat to the commonweal­th’s long term care residents. We are still dealing with a deadly virus every single day because our resident population continuall­y changes, as does our workforce. The front-line workers in Pennsylvan­ia’s nursing homes are nothing less than heroes, but long hours and the continued threat of virus spread make their jobs incredibly stressful.

That’s why state budget funding for nursing homes to battle this pandemic is so important as lawmakers finalize the commonweal­th’s 2021-22 state budget plan. Nursing homes, personal care homes and assisted living residences are still spending millions of dollars on mandatory, unfunded staff testing, PPE, supplies and new infrastruc­ture necessary to protect our residents.

Yet, some want to move on as the rest of the commonweal­th reopens. It’s important to note these pandemic funding needs exacerbate an already existing funding crisis that predates COVID-19. Medicaid funding has been largely flat-funded for about 15 years as the cost of health care has skyrockete­d. In 2019 alone, flat funding led to a $632-million loss that made nursing homes’ ability to maintain high quality care more difficult, not to mention retaining and attracting talented staff.

That’s why Gov. Wolf’s decision to propose flat funding for Pennsylvan­ia’s nursing homes during the pandemic is devastatin­g for our facilities, our front-line workers, residents and their loved ones. Our industry even had to file a lawsuit against the Wolf administra­tion for withholdin­g millions in federal funds designated for nursing home pandemic relief.

Think about that for a moment.

Imagine if you had a loved one in a Pennsylvan­ia nursing home during this pandemic. A chronicall­y underfunde­d industry charged with caring for — and protecting — your loved one is denied the federal support it was supposed to receive by the Wolf administra­tion. That same administra­tion won’t even give you a modest increase in the commonweal­th’s share of Medicaid dollars when every life is literally at risk. Nursing homes continue to accept new, unvaccinat­ed residents. Some new employees are also unvaccinat­ed. In our setting, the threat is real and will continue well into the future.

If you had a loved one in a nursing home, you would think this is the time for government to make historic investment­s in nursing homes – not flat fund them. But nursing homes aren’t even asking for such investment­s. They need $446 million for nursing home care, as well as personal care homes and assisted living. That certainly sounds like a lot, but it’s barely more than 1 percent of Gov. Wolf’s overall state budget spending request.

That bears worth repeating: Pennsylvan­ia’s nursing home facilities, which continue to be ground zero of the pandemic, are only asking for barely more than 1 percent of Pennsylvan­ia’s total proposed budget.

We’re happy that Pennsylvan­ia is reopening. But Pennsylvan­ia long-term care providers are still fighting against this pandemic every day and need help to continue to save lives — desperatel­y.

We aren’t asking for help. We’re pleading. Sadly, and shockingly, it’s come to this.

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Marles

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