Collusion between nursing home operator with investigator

Lexington Herald Leader reported the guilty pleas of Moses Young, assistant director with the Office of Inspector General, and Sharon Harris, a state-employed nurse who covered up the inappropriate relationship and unethical behavior they had with at least one nursing home operator.  Kentucky investigators learned they each lived in Lexington homes owned by Ralph Stacey Jr.  At the time, Stacey owned Garrard Convalescent Home in Covington.

An April 1 indictment against Young alleged that Young lived rent-free from July 2005 to March 2008 in a condominium owned by a third party in violation of state ethics rules, identified in documents only as "R.S."  A plea agreement said Young admitted that he and others made bogus rent receipts and presented them to a federal grand jury. sIn exchange, the indictment alleged, Young provided R.S. with inside agency information and instructions that would assist R.S. in passing inspections and obtaining favorable treatment with regard to administrative actions of the Cabinet for Health and Family Services. In exchange for the guilty plea, prosecutors said they would drop the charge related to Young allegedly providing inside information.

In her plea agreement, Harris admitted that she had "watched as others fabricated the receipts to thwart a criminal investigation." Her plea agreement said she told an FBI agent in April 2009 that she knew the rent receipts Young provided were genuine because she had personally delivered the receipts over time to the landlord.

Why didn't they arrest Ralph Stacey for bribery or something?

 Maybe this article from the Kentucky Lexington Herald Leader explains why. The Herald-Leader examined the industry's campaign donations following stories earlier this summer that revealed systemic gaps in the state's handling of abuse and neglect cases at nursing homes.  The nursing home industry gave at least $1.8 million to Kentucky politicians over the last decade while lobbying against bills that would require them to hire more direct-care employees, face higher fines for violations and abide by stronger precautions against elder abuse, among others.

Nursing home reform bills usually are assigned to the House Health and Welfare Committee, where they perish.  Committee chairman Tom Burch is invested in a real estate trust that includes nursing homes. Burch's former House aide, Eric Clark, now is chief lobbyist for the Kentucky Association of Health Care Facilities, the group representing for-profit nursing homes, and runs its political action committee, which has given at least $90,750 in campaign donations since 2005.  U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell gets more of the industry's money than any other Kentucky politician, at least $266,350 over the last decade. McConnell does not support nursing home reform.

The Kentucky Association of Health Care Facilities gives annual awards to nursing homes that raise the most money for its political action committee, with special emphasis on companies that use payroll deduction to collect the money from employees.

In 2008, for instance, Barren County Health Center in Glasgow won an award from KAHCF for "most contributions raised overall per bed" for its region. That same year, the same nursing home received a Type A citation — the most serious — from the state after a resident choked to death on a fried chicken dinner.

Overall, KAHCF honored four nursing homes and consultants Wells Health Systems that year for their political fund-raising, according to the group's 2009-10 Membership Directory and Buyer's Guide.

The majority of the industry's campaign money goes to Kentucky's congressional delegation. The industry's national group, the American Health Care Association, reports spending more than $1.1 million so far this year lobbying Congress on Medicaid payments and rules that would require public disclosure of the size of nursing homes' direct-care staffs and how much they are paid, among other items.

Also, the Herald-Leader in July reported that Type A citations issued against nursing homes by the state sometimes sit in Conway's office or with local prosecutors for more than 18 months while officials decide whether to pursue criminal charges.

 

Ranking nursing homes

U.S. News & World Report issues the best and worst nursing homes every year based on federal and state inspections, surveys, and required data on staffing.  Here is the most recent article.  The rankings are only as good as the investigators which in most cases is poor.  On a given day, 1.5 million people are living in the nation's 16,000-plus nursing homes, and in a typical year more than 3.2 million Americans will spend at least some time in one. 

 

The U.S. News rankings rely on Nursing Home Compare, a program run by the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. CMS analyzes information on all homes enrolled in Medicare or Medicaid.  The homes also receive ratings of one to five stars in each of three areas: health inspections, nurse staffing, and measures of care.

At Nursing Home Compare, you can search for a specific home or for all homes in a particular state or within a certain distance of your city or ZIP code. But you can't assume that all five-star homes, or those with three or four stars, are of the same quality. There are so many homes in each rating—1,855 in the five-star and 3,661 in the four-star categories alone—that the range of performance is bound to be very wide. Nor can search terms be combined if, say, you want only five-star homes within 50 miles of a specific city.

America's Best Nursing Homes addresses these and other issues. Homes are presented in tiers within each star category, based on their total stars in all three of the major areas. The topmost tier, for example, consists only of five-star homes that got 15 stars. The next tier down is five-star homes with 14 total stars, and so on.

Here are more details about the measures that go into the CMS ratings.

Health inspections. Because almost all nursing homes accept Medicare or Medicaid residents, they are regulated by the federal government as well as by the states in which they operate. State survey teams conduct health inspections on behalf of CMS about every 12 to 15 months. They also investigate health-related complaints from residents, their families, and other members of the public. "Health" is broadly defined, as is evident in the 180-some items on the checklist. Besides such matters as safety of food preparation and adequacy of infection control, the list covers such issues as medication management, residents' rights and quality of life, and proper skin care. A home's rating is based on the number of deficiencies, their seriousness, and their scope, meaning the relative number of residents who were or could have been affected. Deficiencies are counted that were identified during the three most recent health inspections and in investigations of public complaints in that time frame. State inspectors also check for compliance with fire safety rules, although their findings do not factor into the CMS ratings.

Nurse staffing. Even the best nursing care is not enough if there are too few nurses to spend much time with residents, so CMS determines average nursing time per patient per day. Homes report the average number of registered nurses, licensed practical nurses, licensed vocational nurses, and certified nurse aides who were on the payroll during the two weeks prior to the most recent health inspection and their number of hours worked. The information is compared with the average number of residents during the same period and crunched to determine the average number of minutes of nursing time residents got per day. 

Quality measures. Nursing homes have to furnish the latest three quarters of clinical data showing the status of each individual Medicare and Medicaid resident in 19 indicators, such as the percentage of residents who had urinary tract infections or who were physically restrained to keep from falling from a bed or a chair. The Best Nursing Homes rankings and Nursing Home Compare display data for each home on all 19. The ratings, however, are based on 10 that are considered the most valid and reliable, such as the two above and measures related to pain, bedsores, and mobility.

 

Analysis of Pittsburgh's nursing homes

Pittsburg Tribune Review had an article discussing the failures of Pittsburgh's nursing homes.   The article mentions several examples such as one resident cried out for water before going to the hospital with dehydration; another broke an eye socket when a wheelchair rolled down a ramp and crashed; a patient died when workers improperly adjusted a breathing tube; two were so malnourished that they weighed less than 80 pounds each;  a resident did not get a hair wash for nearly four weeks;  and another was told to "go in your pants" when requesting help with going to the bathroom.   These are common complaints at all nursing homes around the country due to understaffing, burn-out, and lack of training.

Those cases and more were drawn from a Tribune-Review analysis of state surveys conducted at 118 nursing homes in Western Pennsylvania over the past three years.  Inspectors cited homes for 3,798 deficiencies, and in 33 cases, found serious lapses posing "actual harm" or "immediate jeopardy," under federal definition.  Among the deficiencies, inspectors noted hundreds of incidents that caused pain or discomfort for nursing-home residents. Those violations have the "potential for more than minimal harm." They include failures to treat skin ulcers or to help patients eat when they can't feed themselves.  Most often, problems related to quality of care or unsanitary conditions.

Rosalie Kane, a professor of public health at the University of Minnesota, said that the quality of life for nursing-home residents has not improved — even if surveys don't find as many alarming violations.  "Those surveys don't make nursing homes better over time," Kane said. "They just represent the lowest common denominator keyed to issues that are considered unacceptable."

The Trib's review followed the November arrests of five employees at Kane Regional Center in Glen Hazel, who were charged with abusing and tormenting a 94-year-old Alzheimer's patient. More than 2,800 complaints of abuse or neglect of nursing home patients are substantiated each year, according to the inspector general for the Department of Health and Human Services.

Nursing homes do not spend enough money on staffing required to ensure adequate care.  Nursing home staff members decide whether residents' preferences are met. Too much of nursing home operations revolve around what's convenient for staff, not patients.

Nursing home staff and inspectors should ask residents whether they participate in meaningful activities, whether they have opportunity to have private conversations, and what they like or don't like about the food.

Under federal law, state health inspectors must survey nursing homes at least once every 15 months and whenever they receive a complaint. Often, homes are cited for a serious deficiency only after a patient is seriously harmed.

 

Living in a deficient nursing home

The Chicago Tribune had a well written and tragic story on the living conditions in a one star nursing home.  The articles discusses numerous and disgusting incidents of neglect that injured residents both physically and psychologically.

Dozens of health violations were documented last year on a single inspection of the Berwyn Rehabilitation Center, contributing to its dubious distinction as one of the area's worst nursing homes in the area.   The federal government is now rating nursing facilities on a 1 to 5 star system. Although conditions at one-star homes are startling, what is perhaps more alarming is their prevalence: About a quarter of U.S. nursing homes, including 81 in the six-county Chicago area, received one star.

The Tribune obtained the most recent inspection reports for the area's lowest-rated homes through a Freedom of Information Act request. The conditions described are grim and, at times, deadly—as the Berwyn facility demonstrates.

Inspectors found workers were improperly using side railings on beds. Four months later, records show, a 53-year-old obese resident suffocated when he got stuck between the mattress and side rails. Illinois fined the facility only $50,000 for the death, one of the largest nursing home penalties in the state last year.

According to records, all major violations found during the annual inspection last March had been corrected as of June. But the man who suffocated did so in July—weeks after new management took over. 

One-star nursing homes meet minimum standards but are considered "much below average," according to the federal rating system. Inspection reports of those facilities show the daily despair many residents face.

Residents in most nursing homes complain of cold or tasteless food, staff not answering calls for help, loud employees keeping them up at night, and workers not relaying phone messages from family members.

Residents say that when they voice concerns, staff respond at times by pointing to the cemetery across the street. State investigators cited the nursing home, concluding that residents could not speak up without fear of reprisal.  Almost all the patients lay in their beds, sleeping or watching TV.  The vast majority of the residents can't walk and are incontinent.  

This is a great article for anyone who wants to know about the care provided in many nursing homes throughout this country using our tax money.

New federal rules make it more difficult to get information

The Capital-Journal Editorial Board had a recent editorial about a change in federal rules on nursing home inspections that restricts access to information about care facilities. The changes were adopted by the Bush administration and went into effect in October.

"It's an extremely troubling development — it puts a lot of information related to nursing-home inspections off-limits," said the director of a nonprofit organization funded in part by the federal Administration on Aging. "I think it's certainly bad for consumers and the folks who represent them."

The change barred nursing home inspectors from releasing privileged information to the public without approval from the director of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. State employees who performed inspections for the federal government have been reclassified as federal employees as part of the revision.

The editorial was based on an Associated Press story which focused on an 81-year-old woman who was transported from a North Carolina nursing home to a hospital in 2006 with pain in her hip.  The woman's family later discovered her hip had been fractured, but no one at the nursing home had told the family anything about an accident.  Her daughter was able to find out what happened, but only by reviewing follow-up reports by state inspectors.

Under the new rules, those documents wouldn't be available except with approval by the head of the sprawling Medicare and Medicaid Services agency. In the North Carolina case, the family learned from state regulators that a nurse's aide had allowed her mother to fall. The aide then got colleagues to prop up the woman in a chair and agree not to report the incident to a supervisor, as required.  This kind of cover up is typical of many nursing homes.

It took more than two weeks for the woman to obtain treatment for the bone fracture. Now, she can't walk.

 

Staffing inadequacies impair quality of care

The Roanoke News recently had an article about the numerous deficiences and violations found by infrequent inspections of nursing homes. 

At Avante at Roanoke, an unannounced health and fire inspection turned up 34 deficiencies in 2007 -- more than four times the national average for for-profit nursing homes. During visits to the facility, inspectors found patients not being bathed because of staff shortages, problems with cleanliness and at least two instances where residents faced immediate harm.

A new national study finds that such problems are not uncommon. Inspectors cited 94 percent of nursing homes last year for federal health and safety standards, the Department of Health and Human Services reported this week.  Nationwide, about 17 percent of nursing homes had deficiencies that caused "actual harm" or put patients in "immediate jeopardy," the report noted, and for-profit homes were more likely to have citations than government-sponsored and nonprofit nursing homes.

Take bed sores, for instance. Last year, Virginia was ranked among the 10 worst states in the nation for high-risk pressure ulcers, she said, noting 2,260 instances.

Virginia's Medicaid reimbursement rate is so low that facilities lose an average of $7 per day per Medicaid resident, he said. "And yet we have to meet the same 150 federal standards as nursing homes in other states, some of which get close to double the reimbursement."

Avante at Roanoke, a 130-bed facility, had the most violations, with 28 health-inspection infractions and six fire and safety deficiencies. Average daily certified nursing assistant time per patient at Avante was one hour, 40 minutes -- less than the region's top performer by 70 minutes.  Clearly this proves that inadequate staffing impairs the quality of care provided.

The 180-bed Virginia Veterans Care Center had 26 health and three fire and safety violations. "The year before we had three or four total," said Bill Van Thiel, administrator of the Salem facility. "It's important to remember that any survey is pretty much a one-time snapshot, and there's a huge range in severity." The existence of bed sores is a much more telling gauge of facility excellence, he added. "Normally we run about three acquired bed sores for 180 patients; that's way under the national average [of 12.7 percent]. Today, I have none."


 

 

Are nursing home inspections worth doing?

 I have read several articles recently about how some cities like Cincinnati may stop conducting nursing home inspections.  That is fine with me since most inspectors in South Carolina are so overworked and underfunded that the inspectors don't have the time and resources to properly insure that the nursing home is properly caring for the residents. 

Typically, the nursing homes know when they are coming and improve conditions before the inspectors get there.  We hear countless stories from ex-employees of nursing homes in the area that all repeat the same chorus.  "They increase staff and clean everything when they know the survey team will be coming in". 

I have not seen any complaints substantiated or any fines incurred against any of the for profit nursing homes. The inspectors in South Carolina seem to ignore violations, and the concerns of residents and family members. Instead, they criticize the county run nursing homes or the charitable organizations that run the mom and pop nursing homes.  I can't tell if it is corruption or incompetence but certainly the inspection program in South Carolina isn't doing anything to provide better care or oversight for the residents.

Below is a summary of a story by Dan Horn about Cincinnati dropping nursing home inspections

The Cincinnati Health Department is considering whether to drop its inspection program for nursing homes and residential care facilities. Budget cuts and retirements could soon leave the department unable to keep up with annual inspections. Cincinnati is the only city in the state that does its own nursing home inspections, a policy that city officials have said allows the city to react more quickly and aggressively to problems.   He said the program once operated with six inspectors and supervisors, but that number fell to four by the start of this year. Another retirement will drop the total to three employees by this fall.

 

 



 

Investigation proves lack of enforcement

Arizona Daily Star reported an investigation into the lack of investigation of neglect and abuse in Arizona nursing homes.  The investigation was bold and tragic and led to the reopeing of several complaints, and the conclusion that Arizona fails to protect elderly and vulnerable nursing home residents.  Below are excerpts from the story and investigation.

tAnita McEvoy put her 92-year-old mother in a Tucson nursing home so she wouldn't get hurt as Alzheimer's disease took its toll. Instead, her mother shivered in bed while nursing aides took no notice. She died of hypothermia complications.

Another elderly woman, who couldn't see well and trusted nursing aides to bathe her, did not know they used a cell phone camera to photograph her in the shower, then went to the nursing station to show the photos and laugh about them with others.

And in a third local nursing home, a nursing aide assigned to feed a confused, 84-pound woman withheld a drink and demanded that the woman say "please" and "thank you," laughing while the woman kept asking: "What do you want? Who the hell are you?"

These cases and others over the past three years have this in common: State regulators did nothing about them.   Until Friday — when investigators reopened one of the cases as a direct result of the Star's questions.   The inspectors showed a consistent pattern of weak enforcement.
Only 15 percent of the time did they substantiate allegations of abuse, neglect or other problems in how the homes cared for some of our most vulnerable people.

The Star reviewed nearly 1,000 citations for safety problems and more than 1,100 complaints of poor care to the Arizona Department of Health Services in Pima County's 22 nursing homes in the three years ending in 2007.  The review mirrors what federal auditors have found nationally: State inspectors miss violations, underrate the severity of the offenses, and allow homes to yo-yo in and out of compliance.

The Star's investigation also reveals:
● The state blew its own investigation deadlines in three out of every four cases, often compromising the findings because patients and staff members are no longer around. The median case is 72 days late.
● The state doesn't give you enough information to determine whether a home is giving consistently good care. The public can't see the patient's side of any given complaint. You can't see reports the nursing homes make when a patient is harmed. And the only snapshot of how a home is performing is up to 18 months old in some cases.
● The state fined poorly performing homes only 24 times in three years, even though it wrote 958 citations. Until recently, the fines were typically so small that even your next-door neighbor could pay them — usually not much more than $1,000.
● Unlike other states that have set precise staffing standards, Arizona adheres to a vague requirement of "sufficient" staffing. That standard, set by the federal government 20 years ago, is notoriously difficult to assess.
● Unlike doctors, nursing homes don't have to disclose if they've paid out judgments or settlements. Dozens of cases have been settled secretly. It could become even harder to learn about improper care, because homes are getting patients to promise not to sue if something goes wrong.
● Because the state rarely substantiates complaints, sometimes staffers who are fired at one nursing home after being accused of abuse or neglect can be hired right away at another.

 

Tucson Region
STAR INVESTIGATION
Arizona fails to protect nursing home residents
State is slow to investigate and act on abuse, neglect
The U.S. Government Accountability Office concluded in 2005 that 8 percent to 33 percent of state investigations missed significant care problems at nursing homes.
Researchers at the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center wondered what's really happening in the field. In 2007 they tagged along with survey teams in four other states and found a trend: Investigators often minimized what was happening in nursing homes, either by dropping citations or downplaying their severity. Researchers watched new staff members argue vehemently to cite a home, only to meet resistance from higher-ups, resulting in a "socialization of trainees to make lenient decisions."

Homes cite turnover, funding as problems
Eighty-year-old Sylvia Culpepper moved into ManorCare after being treated for sciatica pain at a nearby hospital. Her doctor prescribed morphine, and the nursing home staff began giving it to her. Two days later, she was dead of an overdose.
Her family's lawyers say the staff continued to give her the morphine "despite the fact that she was showing visible signs of a narcotic overdose."
They also alleged in a lawsuit that Culpepper was the victim of a profit scheme to skimp on staffing at the expense of patient safety.
A ManorCare registered nurse who quit her job a week after Culpepper's death testified in the lawsuit that as the only nurse assigned to the subacute-care unit, her workload was too heavy and unsafe — part of an "intolerable working environment."

Twenty years ago, Congress passed extensive nursing home reforms. The new law set a vague requirement to have enough staffing to "maintain the highest practicable well-being of each resident." It required a licensed nurse to be on staff at all times and at least one registered nurse for eight hours each day, no matter how big or small the home.
Some lawmakers want to strengthen nursing home regulations. Sens. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, and Herb Kohl, D-Wis., have introduced the Nursing Home Transparency Act of 2008, which would require more consistent reporting of staff hours, disclose more about who owns the homes and increase fines.
On any given day, the nation's nursing homes are short almost 100,000 positions, according to a 2005 report by the National Commission on Nursing Workforce for Long-Term Care. The turnover rate is just shy of 50 percent for registered nurses and 71 percent for nursing aides, who make a median hourly wage of $10.67, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Recruiting and training new workers costs roughly $250,000 per year for each nursing home in the country, the report says. New staffers mean a dip in productivity, Martin said: "Some staff will leave for 50-cents-an- hour wage increase, so we're constantly stealing from each other."
Administrators, too, depart in huge numbers. A 2001 study pegged turnover at 43 percent.
Although nursing homes report staffing levels to the federal government, those numbers are not audited. Even federal auditors have questioned their validity. Homes also don't have to report their turnover rates.
Mary Reskin, a 50-year-old local teacher, said she didn't believe the horror stories she'd heard about understaffed nursing homes. Then her 73-year-old father, a teacher and guidance counselor at Flowing Wells High School for 30 years, became ill and spent time in three nursing homes in 2006.
"I'm a teacher; I don't expect perfection. I went in trusting people to do the best they could," she said. Instead, she found staffers who were overworked and indifferent.  In general, she said, the homes didn't keep her father clean, didn't care for him well and pushed him out the door too soon.

Residents sign away right to sue
When state regulations fail, it is often the courts that provide a separate check on nursing homes.
Few cases, though, actually go to trial. Most settle. And they inevitably settle with confidentiality agreements that prevent the victims or their lawyers from talking about the case or disclosing how much the nursing homes paid out.
Across the nation, fewer patients are filing suits and plaintiffs are winning less money, in part because of caps on lawsuit awards. In Texas, the number and size of claims are down more than 60 percent from pre-tort-reform levels.
The nursing home lobby won some changes at the Arizona Legislature four years ago, requiring a victim to promptly produce an expert witness detailing the alleged substandard care. Lawmakers hoped this would reduce the filing of frivolous lawsuits against health-care professionals. Attorneys counter that those concerns are overblown — medical cases are so costly to work up that they are very careful about screening cases.
To head off judgments, some nursing homes are increasingly using "alternative dispute resolution" agreements. Often found in admission packets, the document states that residents will not sue the home if something goes wrong, but instead will mediate the dispute. If that fails, the case generally goes before an arbitrator, selected and paid for by the nursing home. That decision is binding.
Sen. Russell Feingold, D-Wis., introduced legislation last year saying these agreements have far surpassed their initial intent of solving disputes between commercial companies of similar sophistication and bargaining power — say, a lumber company negotiating with a big chain home-improvement store.
Because arbitration companies are beholden to the corporations for repeat business, there is strong financial incentive to rule in their favor, the consumer advocacy group Public Citizen reported last year. The group looked at mandatory arbitration by the credit card industry in California, which in 2003 became the only state to open some arbitration records to the public. In more than 19,000 cases, 94 percent of the decisions sided with business.
Complaints aren't irrelevant. A 2006 Harvard University study found they are a good indicator of how many problems state inspectors will find — and how serious those problems are — when the homes have their next inspection.
Those who study the nursing home industry and lobby for reforms say their experiences back up the Star's findings.  University of California researcher Charlene Harrington said she has been pushing for changes since 1975 — and in that time, she has seen numerous federal studies finding the same ongoing problems with weak enforcement across states.

Janet Wells, director of public policy with the National Citizen's Coalition for Nursing Home Reform, agreed that the problems the Star found are "pretty common" across state survey agencies. The group has been lobbying for change for 33 years, and change is often slow, she said.
But fixing the system needs to be a focus. We're all at risk, she said.
Then there's the larger issue of how we protect those who can't protect themselves.
"This is how substantial numbers of people in this country are ending their lives," Wells said. "It's the final place many people live and the last living experience people know. If it's a bad environment and if they're neglected and suffering unnecessarily, it speaks very poorly for our society and where our values are."

First hand account of being a resident

Here is an article about a self described "nursing home survivor" who relays his experience in a nursing home.  Below are excerpts of his article.

I was an industrial electrician by trade, trained to evaluate current flows and make connections between positives and negatives. Get shocked once and you'll never grab a live wire again. I'm also a Tennessee nursing home survivor, and the same goes for the 5½ years I spent living in a "home." The experience was beyond shocking. I will never repeat it.

Jan. 15, 1984, was the day of the accident that changed my life forever, leaving me with quadriplegia. I began a journey no one would want to take — but many probably will. I was 35, young enough to at least put up the kind of fight that many nursing home residents are too elderly or sick to wage. I survived several life-threatening mistakes by poorly trained staff, years of conflict with unequipped and unsympathetic "caregivers" and countless unanswered calls for help.

I made it my mission to get out of that home, and now work to help others do the same. I wish I could say that conditions have greatly improved since 1984. But 20 nursing homes across the state have had their admissions suspended this year, a 100 percent increase from 2006; and 91 percent of the state's homes had complaints filed against them in 2006.

Yes, nursing homes are inspected every year by the state. But what inspectors never see are the nurses and administrators scrambling after getting notice of an upcoming visit. During one of these frenzies, I told a friend, "Better watch out, you might get run over by somebody doing something they haven't done all year!"

Before these inspections, staff members are like juveniles trying to clean up after a party before their parents get home. Bedsores are dressed, soiled linens are washed, meds are — quite generously — given, the stale scent of sickness is replaced with that of disinfectant.

Lobby keeps funds flowing

Despite their miserable track records, nursing homes receive 99 percent of the $1 billion in tax dollars that Tennessee dedicates to long-term care. Eighty percent of these homes are private, for-profit entities. It's no wonder the nursing home lobby gives hundreds of thousands in campaign contributions each year to our state legislators; they're trying to protect what they claim is "their" money.

Only 1 percent of tax dollars goes to home- and community-based care, even though this type of care is usually far better. This completely lopsided allocation of tax dollars makes Tennessee 50th in the U.S. — dead last — in funding for long-term, home-based and community care.

We can change this. Most of us will ultimately need to arrange long-term care for a loved one or will need it ourselves. We must demand legislators redistribute our tax dollars in favor of significantly more funding for home- and community-based care.

We must also demand that, as long as the current system is in place, the state increase the number and quality of nursing home inspections.

And finally, we must bring to a grinding halt the practice of notifying homes of upcoming inspections. The state represents the citizens who have to live in these places. On their behalf, its inspectors should be welcomed at any time.

Poliakoff & Associates, P.A., is one of South Carolina’s most respected and distinguished law firms. The Poliakoff firm began nearly 60 years ago by three attorney brothers: Matthew, J. Manning, and Bernard. With a history of believing the justice system...More...