Nursing home beds and residents have decreased

McKnight's had an article discussing the recent National Nursing Home Survey: 2004 Overview is the seventh in a series of periodic nursing home surveys conducted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's National Center for Health Statistics, Division of Healthcare Statistics. The full study is available at here.

The number of both nursing home beds and nursing home residents in the United States declined between 1999 and 2004.   The number of nursing home beds dropped by more than 10% from 1.9 million in 1999 to 1.7 million in 2004. Meanwhile, the number of nursing home residents fell by 6% from 1.6 million to 1.5 million according to the study.

Here are other study findings:

More facilities were both Medicare and Medicaid certified in 2004 (87.6%) than in 1999 (81.8%).

Of the 936,000 persons providing nursing home care in 2004, the vast majority (roughly 600,800) were certified nursing assistants (CNAs).

Slightly more than 88% of the residents of the nation's 16,100 skilled nursing facilities are over the age of 65, 45.2% are over the age of 85, and 71.2% are female.

Only 1.6% of the entire nursing home population received no assistance with activities of daily living (ADLs) while a slight majority—51.1%—required assistance in all five ADL categories.

 

Baby boomers and long term care

The Chattanooga Free Times Press had a great article discussing the need to make long term care a priority since baby boomers will begin entering facilities soon.  I think it should have been a priority for the last 20 years since elderly people who need health care are the most vulnerable members of the citizenry.

The article emphasizes the need for more efficient and less costly long-term care services because as baby boomers age and require more specialized care, there will be greater need for quality services.  10 million Americans need long-term care and that number will grow in the coming years.  Health care providers, educators, advocates for the elderly and lawmakers gathered at Blood Assurance in Chattanooga for a discussion focused on long-term care reform.

The number of U.S. geriatricians is far too small to handle the coming flood of people who will require geriatric care, said Dr. John Standridge, director of the geriatric fellowship program at the University of Tennessee College of Medicine in Chattanooga. “At a time when we are adding 75 million more children of the World War II generation to our geriatrics population, the (number of) people that are adequately trained in geriatric syndromes is falling by leaps and bounds,” he said.

Legislators should create incentives for students to go into geriatrics.  Elder care issues also affect acute care hospitals.  Hospitals often house many elderly patients who can’t be discharged because there are no community-based support services that can take care of them.

 

Many nursing homes have young residents for short term rehab

The Fort Mill Times had an interesting article discussing how nursing homes are no longer for those who are elderly.  Many young people live in them when they become disabled.  The article talks about  Lori Hagedorn.  She had worked at nursing homes before she started living in one at age 45.

She suffers with chronic medical problems.  She is part of a growing population of younger people who need the long-term care, skilled nursing and structure offered in a nursing home.

Two decades ago, about 1 percent of nursing home residents were under the age of 65.  Now it's closer to 10 percent, according to statistics from the Department of Social and Health Services in Washington state.

"It used to be a place where the aged went," Vande Merwe says. "Now 80 percent of new admissions are coming for short-term rehabilitation." Some eventually return home or go to an assisted living setting.  "It's not that uncommon because we have a gap in the health care system between the hospital and the nursing home. People like Lori are younger, but they need the medical care. The structure and support of the staff helps people to remain as independent as possible."

Vande Merwe expects the upswing in younger patients to continue.  Some children are in nursing homes because of severe birth defects and disabilities. Other young people have diseases with no cure, such as multiple sclerosis, and may reside in nursing homes for many years.

Activity directors say keeping younger residents active and stimulated can be a challenge. For years, most programs were geared to a different generation. The new clientele would rather surf on the Internet, send e-mails or play video games.

 

Colorado reforming nursing homes

The Denver Post had an interesting article about new developments in elder care.  Facilities are trying to move away from institutional settings and make resident's stay feel more like home.

The article states that "a generation of retirees resists the fate of nursing homes they've grown to dread, supporters of a cultural revolution say they are reforming an industry long tainted by images of neglected patients languishing on soiled sheets".

Reforms will likely quicken in the next year as Colorado begins sending higher Medicaid payments to homes that make changes ranging from reducing bed sores to giving residents a peanut-butter sandwich on demand.   Critics of traditional nursing- home care are not ready to declare lasting success. Reforms at a given home too often depend on the energy and dedication of a few key staff members, and those changes are difficult to replicate in more than 16,000 nursing homes nationwide.

"In general, the quality of nursing-home care is really bad," said Charlene Harrington, a professor of sociology and nursing at the University of California at San Francisco who has studied national reforms. Truly improving care almost always requires increasing staff, she said.

"There's some basic merits to the idea of the culture-change movement," Harrington said. But "the nursing-home industry is trying to promote the idea you don't need the staff; you just change the culture. That's why I'm skeptical of the whole effort."

"The heart of it is just treating people the way you want to be treated," said Barbara Moore, administrator of Bruce McCandless Colorado State Veterans Nursing Home in Florence. Once entrenched in a notorious state nursing system, McCandless has won kudos for trying everything from consistently matching staff with the same patients to parking a Patton tank outside for grandkids to climb on.

Promotion of culture change or comparable reforms is vital for baby boomers who want to avoid mass warehousing in the coming decades. The U.S. population 65 and older will jump from 40 million in 2010 to 55 million in 2020, according to the federal Administration on Aging.

The vulnerable population 85 and older, meanwhile, will need many new care beds, with the population in that oldest group rising from 6.1 million to 7.3 million that same decade.
By all accounts, they want to avoid the nursing homes of their parents' day.

Another Medicare and Medicaid report in September said that more than 90 percent of U.S. nursing homes were cited for violating federal standards in the past three years, but those transgressions can range from improper food storage to acute medical problems.
Caring for the elderly, meanwhile, consumes a good share of the state budget.

In Colorado and across the country, nursing-home occupancy rates are flat or dropping even as the population ages. More families are keeping aging relatives at home, hiring home-health aides, or choosing newer and smaller assisted-living sites for patients who don't need extensive medical care.

Culture change can be as varied as adopting a cow for a pet or building a $1 million adapted home from the ground up to house only six residents — but the basic tenets across the country are consistent:

• Breaking from institutional schedules and rules in which residents must eat at common times or take showers at a rigid hour set by the staff.

• Training staff in resident-centered care and reassigning employees to more-consistent jobs.

• Some attempt to alter the physical monotony of nursing-home settings dominated by institutional 1960s and '70s architecture. Larger homes may parcel themselves into "neighborhoods;" others renovate with resident input on colors and materials; still more add gardens, meditation rooms or restaurant-style dining areas.

A national survey of the transformation of nursing-home culture found that 31 percent of homes had adopted significant portions of the movement. The results "indicate a hopeful picture about the potential for deep, systemic change within the industry," according to the Commonwealth Fund.

Proponents believe the new state reimbursement system for Medicaid will eliminate any reason not to participate in the changes being made.  Culture change is not more expensive in the long run — it can save on staff turnover, food costs and expensive acute care. But for managers concerned about immediate costs, the state program to come on line next summer offers immediate financial rewards.

Nursing homes will earn points for quality of medical care, satisfaction of patients and their families, and culture-change tenets like consistent staffing and resident-controlled decisions. A home that scores 100 points will receive $4 more per Medicaid patient per day (on top of the current Medicaid rate of about $178 a day).

Medicaid pays for about 63 percent of nursing-home residents; the new payment system will mean, for example, that a high-scoring home with 70 Medicaid patients could earn an extra $8,400 a month. The first year of the program will cost $4 million, half coming from the federal government and half from a new fee charged to all nursing homes.

 

Demographics and nursing home care

U.S News and World Report had an article about the difficulties of caring for an elderly loved one.  Journalist Gail Sheehy writes about navigating through the U.S. health care system during her struggle to care for her gravely ill husband. 

More than a year ago, her husband, publisher Clay Felker, was being discharged from a New York City rehabilitation facility after spending several months there in his long battle with throat cancer. "So, he has to come home now, and we've run out of benefits," Sheehy recalled at a recent media briefing in New York City. "We're coming out, and there's also nobody telling me what I have to do. He has a feeding tube, he has a tracheotomy, he has medications. I don't know where to start."

Desperate, she sought out and hired a "geriatric care manager" -- at $125 an hour -- to advise them. Their insurance might still pay for an at-home nurse, she found out, but only if it's a Medicare-approved nurse -- and there aren't any available in the city.

There are home health-care aides, of course, "but they cannot do medical services like giving a shot, taking care of a trach, changing a feeding tube," Sheehy said.

Once private insurance benefits end, the only option for most Americans is Medicaid, which requires that recipients have less than $5,000 in assets.

Her geriatric care manager spelled it out to Sheehy: If the couple first exhausts all their remaining assets, then Medicaid will cover Felker's nursing care.

And if Sheehy, in her late 60s, wasn't willing to give up all her assets and income?

"Then, you need to divorce him," the geriatric care manager told her.

In Sheehy's case, it never came to that. She and Felker scraped together enough money to hire qualified, in-home caregivers and Felker's last months were spent at home, relatively serene. He died in July at age 82.

Sheehy called her 15-year journey with Felker through the U.S. health care system a "nightmare," and she wonders how less affluent and well-connected Americans are faring.

U.S. Census figures project that the number of Americans 65 or over will double by 2030, and that two-thirds of today's 65-year-olds will require some period of long-term care later in their lives. 
At the same time, the number of geriatricians has actually declined in recent years, to about 7,750: that translates to one for every 4,254 older Americans.   In addition, it's projected that the country will face a shortage of more than 800,000 nurses by 2020.

Wage issues are keeping the number of geriatricians at an all-time low, as well. Geriatricians are crucial, the experts said, because they look not at a particular disease or body site, but at the older person as a whole. However, a recent U.S. Institute of Medicine report found that geriatricians remain the lowest paid medical specialty of all.

 

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