Nursing Homes In Kansas Guilty of Multiple Violations

Four Nursing homes in Kansas are among 81 that are being targeted for better care after they were cited with ten or more deficiencies for each of the home’s three most recent inspections. The four homes have over 10 deficiencies each, one even having 30. Some of the violations included cases that can cause actual harm and immediate jeopardy and/or deficiencies that can be classified as mistreatment of residents.

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Investigation Reveals Massive Neglect and Abuse at Oklahoma Nursing Home

An investigation by a local TV station revealed massive neglect and abuse at an Oklahoma nursing home. The investigation also revealed that, despite many reported cases of abuse and neglect, the state had not closed the nursing home because it lacks the power to do so.

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Reports of Virus Outbreak at Nursing Home

A nursing home facility located in Clawson, Mich is being investigated for a recent outbreak of an illness in their facility. An outbreak of an gastrointestinal virus was reported at Cambridge North Health and Rehabilitation Center after several of the residents had symptoms of vomiting and diarrhea.

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Inspections for Food in Nursing Homes and Hospitals Suffer Budget Cuts

According to an article by CBS 4 in Tallahasse, FL, disturbing findings have been released that in almost all nursing homes and hospitals in Florida the food being served to the residents is not being inspected.

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Who's Watching Out for the Patients?

Nursing homes receiving Medicare or Arizona Long Term Care funds must comply with federal nursing home health and safety regulations.

Nursing homes that are unwilling or unable to provide quality care must not be allowed to retain their license to engage in business in the State of Arizona.

In Arizona, the Department of Health Services (DHS) is the enforcement agency, acting on behalf of both the federal and state governments.

DHS is responsible for ensuring that Arizona nursing homes follow state and federal regulations and provide quality care to their patients. DHS is supposed to be an advocate for nursing home patients.

Nursing homes are required to be inspected at least once every fifteen months and are to be cited for any deficiency in patient care. Inspections must occur more frequently, however, in the event a complaint is filed against a nursing home for poor care.

Poor Enforcement Equals Poor Care
When health and safety regulations are not strictly enforced, nursing homes are encouraged to neglect patient care in their pursuit of profit.

Strict Enforcement Equals Good Care
On the other hand, when nursing homes are held accountable through strict enforcement, patient care and quality of life improve.

Nursing Homes Promise to Mend Their Ways
Although cited nursing homes promise the DHS that they will correct and improve patient care, many of these same nursing homes continue to provide poor patient care.

It is up to the DHS to prevent repeat offenders from providing bad care to our most vulnerable citizens.

Failure to Strictly Enforce Regulations
All too often, however, the DHS fails to act as an advocate for quality patient care and permits nursing homes with repeat violations to continue to retain their Arizona license.

Generally, the most important health and safety regulations are those that require each nursing home have sufficient nursing staff to provide quality care to patients.

However, in Arizona, there is no minimum staffing level required. This makes the DHS inspector’s role most important and difficult. They must determine whether the facility they are inspecting has enough nurses and nurse aides while considering the medical acuity and functional level of each patient.

This is a big job and the inspectors do not uniformly take the time necessary to perform this analysis.

It is up to us to demand patient protection through strict agency enforcement of health and safety regulations.

The “Guardian Blog” will provide information to help both families and professionals assess and improve the quality of nursing home care in Arizona and the Guardian Blog will encourage dialogue with and among its readers.