FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 21, 2022
Contact:
CMS Media Relations
CMS Media Inquiries
Biden-Harris Administration
Strengthens Oversight of Nation’s Poorest-Performing Nursing Homes
Changes to CMS’ Special
Focus Facilities program will increase scrutiny, hold facilities
accountable for substandard safety and quality, and improve care for
residents
As
part of the Biden-Harris Administration’s continued commitment to
improve the safety and quality of care for nursing home residents, the
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) is increasing
scrutiny and oversight over the country’s poorest-performing nursing
facilities in an effort to immediately improve the care they deliver.
In a series of revisions to the Special Focus Facility (SFF) Program,
CMS will toughen requirements for completion of the program and
increase enforcement actions for facilities that fail to demonstrate
improvement. CMS is also calling on states to consider a facility’s
staffing level in determining which facilities enter the SFF Program.
Today’s
announcement is part of a series of new actions the
Biden-Harris Administration is taking to increase accountability of bad
actors in the nursing home industry, improve the quality of nursing
homes and make them safer. Today’s action fulfills a promise laid out
in President Biden’s State of the Union Action Plan for Protecting
Seniors by Improving Safety and Quality of Care in the Nation’s Nursing
Homes to overhaul the SFF Program to strengthen scrutiny
over more poor-performing nursing homes, improve care for the affected
residents more quickly, and better hold facilities accountable for improper
and unsafe care.
“Let
us be clear: we are cracking down on enforcement of our nation’s
poorest-performing nursing homes,” said HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra.
“As President Biden directed, we are increasing scrutiny and taking
aggressive action to ensure everyone living in nursing homes gets the
high-quality care they deserve. We are demanding better, because our
seniors deserve better.”
“People
in this country’s nursing homes deserve access to safe and high-quality
care, and facilities that aren’t providing that level of service need
to improve their performance or face the consequences,” said CMS
Administrator Chiquita Brooks-LaSure. “Poor-performing nursing homes
have the opportunity to improve, but if they fail to do so, the changes
we are making to CMS’ Special Focus Facilities Program will hold these
facilities accountable for the health and safety of their residents.”
CMS
is announcing the following revisions to the SFF Program:
- Making requirements tougher: CMS is strengthening the criteria for successful
completion of the SFF Program by adding a threshold that prevents
a facility from exiting based on the total number of deficiencies
cited—no more “graduating” from the program’s enhanced scrutiny
without demonstrating systemic improvements in quality.
- Terminating federal funding for facilities that
don’t improve:
CMS is considering all facilities cited with Immediate Jeopardy
deficiencies on any two surveys while in the SFF Program for
discretionary termination from the Medicare and/or Medicaid programs.
- Increasing enforcement actions: CMS is imposing more severe, escalating
enforcement remedies for SFF Program facilities that have
continued noncompliance and little or no demonstrated effort to
improve performance.
- Incentivizing sustainable improvements: CMS is extending the monitoring period and
maintaining readiness to impose progressively severe enforcement
actions against nursing homes whose performance declines after
graduation from the SFF Program.
In
another revision to the SFF Program, CMS is advising State Survey
Agencies to consider a facility’s staffing level, in addition to its
compliance history, when selecting candidates from their state for
inclusion into the SFF Program. This recommendation is the latest
action by CMS to focus on the importance of staffing to quality care,
another key component of President Biden’s Action Plan for Nursing
Homes.
The
changes CMS is implementing today are designed to incentivize
facilities to quickly improve their quality and safety performance,
allow the SFF Program to scrutinize more facilities over time by moving
facilities through the Program more quickly, and promote sustainability
of facilities’ improvements to ensure they do not regress post-program.
These
changes to the SFF Program will help drive improvements to resident
care in affected facilities. While the revised SFF Program increases
scrutiny and enforcement consequences for poor-performing nursing
homes, CMS is also emphasizing a number of efforts facilities can take
to support quality improvement, including engaging the CMS Quality
Improvement Organizations and hiring external consultants to support
performance improvement. While in the SFF program, CMS is encouraging
facilities to make good-faith efforts (and provide evidence of these efforts)
to improve quality and measurable changes, such as changes in staffing,
leadership, or increased overall staffing. These efforts will be
considered when evaluating potential enforcement actions for
noncompliance. For example, SFFs with noncompliance and no evidence of
good-efforts to improve quality, will be subject to more severe
enforcement sanctions, such as higher penalties, or suspended or
termination of federal funding.
Currently,
88 nursing homes participate in the SFF Program, approximately 0.5% of
all nursing homes in the country.
While
the SFF Program has helped many nursing homes improve their compliance
and quality, some facilities fail to reach the standards necessary to
graduate from the Program. Additionally, some facilities demonstrate improvement
from the Program, only to regress and fail to sustain their
improvements and compliance.
Since
its inception, the SFF Program has identified the poorest-performing
nursing homes in the country for increased scrutiny to rapidly make and
sustain improvements in the quality of care they deliver. These
facilities continue to be inspected roughly twice as often as all other
nursing homes ̶ no less than once every six months ̶
and face increasingly severe enforcement actions if improvement is not
demonstrated. Facilities must pass two consecutive inspections to
complete the Program. The changes announced today enhance the
existing program to drive rapid and sustained quality, and seek to
greater protect the health and safety of nursing home residents in
these facilities.
CMS’
Quality, Safety & Oversight memorandum on the revisions to the
Special Focus Facilities (SFF) Program can be viewed here.
Read
the White House Fact Sheet: Biden-Harris Administration Announces New Steps
to Improve Quality of Nursing Homes.
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