JoANNE
YOUNG Lincoln Journal Star Sep 29, 2019
When
Wymore's Good Samaritan Center closed in 2017, Virginia Swift was forced to
leave the nursing home in the town in which she had grown up and move 14 miles
down the road to another home.
The
move wasn't too far. Residents in nursing homes in other rural towns have had
to move farther away from their communities when their hometown nursing center
closed.
Since
2015, 27 nursing homes in Nebraska have closed and four have announced closure,
with about half of the total closures coming this year. That number is expected
to increase, said Heath Boddy, CEO of Nebraska Health Care Association.
"There
are still facilities that are trying to make it month-to-month,
quarter-to-quarter, at this point, seeing if they can cash-flow and find a way
to be solvent," Boddy said.
Even
if it was not far, Swift's move was not an easy one. She testified at a
legislative hearing in March on a bill (LB181) that would fund a study of
long-term care sustainability.
Swift,
64, who can't walk, told senators she had grown up in Wymore and spent time as
a schoolgirl at the nursing home she would eventually move into, helping with
programs for residents, visiting them and making table decorations,
trick-or-treating and singing Christmas carols.
She
become a resident herself in 2015, after her home was destroyed by a flood.
Most of the residents in the home were local, she said, and had lived in Wymore
since they were born, the town where they had gone to school, worked and where
their families lived close by.
Their
intent was to live out their last days there, Swift said, being visited by
local volunteers, seeing high school girls on prom night who would stop by to
show off their dresses. They enjoyed continuing connections with their
families, neighbors, local businesses and churches.
"Its
closing had a big impact on the town," she testified.
The
latest four nursing homes to announce closure, all purchased by Azria Health
this month, had a combined 205 state-licensed beds in Blue Hill, Milford,
Columbus and Utica, and about 240 employees.
The
closings are primarily because state payments to nursing homes certified for
Medicaid recipients are below the cost of providing their care, Boddy said.
Even with money appropriated this session by the Legislature, those homes are
getting about $30 a day per Medicaid resident less than the cost of provided
care.
Around
53% of nursing home residents rely on Medicaid for their stay.
Nebraska
Health and Human Services plans to begin a new method of payment for long-term
care facilities beginning July 1, with a phase-in over two years.
Jeremy Brunssen, deputy director in the
Medicaid division, explained on the department's website that the current
cost-based model is difficult to understand and for providers to predict and
manage year-to-year. It's complicated and not transparent, he says.
HHS
spokeswoman Julie Naughton said the department also is updating the regulations
governing the payment, with the proposal to move toward a new methodology that
focuses on "payment equity and quality."
The
new payments would be centered on a base rate that is adjusted for patient
acuity, and then further adjusted for high quality, Naughton said. Senators
have referred to it as a flat rate.
Those
interested can follow the department’s progress on updating the payment methodology
at the Department of Health and Human
Services website.
The
new rates have not been revealed. But Boddy said it's possible they would be
based on the average cost of care in Nebraska, which is about $190 per
resident, per day, with a range of $120 to $250, so some facilities would get
an increase and some a significant decrease.
Under
the current way of paying nursing homes, 29 of them dealt with rate reductions
this year, and the rest had no change or had increases, Boddy said.
Naughton
said while Medicaid pays for services for Medicaid beneficiaries, several other
industry dynamics can impact facilities, including their operating efficiency
and quality, the ability to recruit and retain staff, occupancy and demand from
consumers.
Omaha
Sen. Sara Howard, chairwoman of the Legislature's Health and Human Services
Committee, said there are no other states she knows of considering moving to a
flat-rate payment for nursing homes. She predicts it would be difficult for
nursing homes to operate off a flat rate. In small towns, the margins are
"very, very slim," Howard said.
Also,
she said, having no cost method included in new regulations would mean less
transparency, "that we truly need in order to be able to provide
appropriate oversight as to how the rates are being set."
The
cost method now in regulations reflects cost of care, how many Medicaid
recipients are in the facility, the payer mix and staff ratios.
At a
hearing on Lincoln Sen. Kate Bolz's LB181, which would recommend changes to the
policy and funding of Medicaid long-term care services, she warned senators
about nursing home closures and said skilled- and assisted-nursing facilities
are crucial to the quality of life for those who require long-term care. They
are also vital to small communities, with many of them among the biggest
employers.
The
number of Nebraskans aged 85 or older is projected to double over the next two
decades.
For
those who need nursing home care, Boddy said, he is "very concerned"
about what access is going to look like.
"I
think we're very soon going to see a time when families are going to face tough
decisions to drive long distances to see loved ones who need the services of
long-term care facilities."
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