CMS NEWS
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
November 30, 2018
Contact: CMS Media
Relations
(202) 690-6145 | CMS Media Inquiries
CMS Strengthens Nursing Home Oversight and Safety to Ensure
Adequate Staffing
Agency works with states, facilities to identify and address potential cases of inadequate staffing
Today, the Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) announced actions that will bolster
nursing home oversight and improve transparency in order to ensure that
facilities are staffed adequately to provide high-quality care. These actions
include sharing data with states when potential issues arise regarding
staffing levels and the availability of onsite registered nurses; clarifying
how facilities should report hours and deduct time for staff meal breaks; and
providing facilities with new tools to help ensure their resident census is accurate.
“CMS takes very seriously
our responsibility to protect the safety and quality of care for our
beneficiaries,” said CMS Administrator Seema Verma. “Today CMS is taking
important steps to protect nursing home residents based on potential risks
revealed by new payroll-based staffing data that our
Administration released. We’re deeply concerned about potential
inadequacies in staffing, such as low weekend staffing levels or times when
registered nurses are not onsite, and the impact that this can have on
patient care. The actions announced today strengthen our oversight of
resident health and safety, and help ensure accurate public reporting.”
Research shows the ratio
of nurses to residents impacts quality of care and health outcomes. For
example, facilities with higher nurse staffing levels tend to have fewer
resident hospitalizations. In general, the new payroll-based staffing
data shows most facilities have somewhat fewer staff on weekends, but some
facilities have significantly lower weekend staffing. Additionally, some
facilities have reported days with no registered nurse onsite, although
nursing homes are generally required by law to have a registered nurse onsite
eight hours a day, seven days a week.
To help address these
risks, CMS will use frequently-updated payroll-based data to identify and
provide state survey agencies with a list of nursing homes that have a
significant drop in staffing levels on weekends, or that have several days in
a quarter without a registered nurse onsite. State survey agencies will
then be required to conduct surveys on some weekends based on this
list. If surveyors identify insufficient nurse staffing levels, the
facility will be cited for noncompliance and required to implement a plan of
correction.
These oversight
initiatives are part of broader efforts CMS has underway to strengthen safety
and health outcomes for nursing home residents. For example, the Nursing Home Compare website and
facility Star Ratings are key resources CMS provides to increase transparency
into nursing home quality and help consumers and their caregivers make
informed decisions.
CMS also operates the National Partnership to Improve Dementia Care in
Nursing Homes, which is helping to reduce the inappropriate
prescribing of antipsychotic drugs among nursing home residents, and the
recently-launched Civil Money Penalty Reinvestment Program, a
three-year initiative to improve residents’ quality of life by equipping
nursing home staff, management and stakeholders with practical tools,
education, and assistance to enhance care.
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Administrator @SeemaCMS, @CMSgov, and @CMSgovPress.
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Friday, November 30, 2018
CMS Strengthens Nursing Home Oversight and Safety to Ensure Adequate Staffing
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