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Feeding Assistant Criticism Feeding Assistant Criticism
National
Citizens' Coalition for
NURSING HOME REFORM |
Diane Menio, President
Elma
Holder, Founder
Donna R.
Lenhoff, Esq.,
Executive Director |
1424
16th Street, NW, Suite 202
Washington, DC 20036-2211 |
Phone:
202-332-2275
FAX: 202-332-2949 http://nursinghomeaction.org |
News
Release
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For
Immediate Release
March
29, 2002
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Contact: Janet Wells Ext. 117
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Consumer Coalition
Attacks Nursing Home" Feeding Assistant”
Proposal As “Reckless”
The National Citizens’ Coalition for Nursing Home Reform
today sharply criticized the Department of Health and Human Services for
scrapping federal nurse aide training and abuse registry requirements for a new
class of nursing home workers called "feeding assistants.”
Donna R. Lenhoff, executive director of NCCNHR, called the
proposed regulation “reckless and unnecessary.”
“In a month when we have seen an unprecedented series of
government studies and hearings about nursing home neglect and abuse and the
need for higher staffing standards,” said Lenhoff, “the Secretary wants to
reverse 15 years of modest progress in improving the qualifications of nursing
home workers. Creating a new category of worker who is even more poorly trained,
poorly screened and poorly paid than nurse aides is not the answer to staffing
or quality of care problems.”
Lenhoff said the proposal runs directly counter to findings
in a three-volume study of nurse staffing that HHS sent to Congress March 19.
The report identifies nursing staff-to-resident ratios necessary to provide
quality care, and it concludes that unless a facility staffs at these levels,
so-called “single task workers” do not make a difference.
“Secretary Thompson dismissed the report’s compelling
evidence for strengthening federal nurse staffing standards even as he prepared
to weaken the requirements we have now,” said Lenhoff.
The Nursing Home Reform Act requires nurse aides to receive
at least 75 hours of initial training in a variety of nursing-related skills and
to pass a competency test. States are required to maintain a registry of nurse
aides who have abused, neglected or stolen property from residents. These
requirements would be sharply reduced for part-time workers hired as feeding
assistants, even though in critically understaffed facilities, single task
workers would likely be pressed into performing nursing tasks for which they had
not been trained.
HHS portrays feeding assistants as students, retired people
and homemakers looking for a part-time job.
“We really do not buy this,” said Lenhoff. “We
believe the proposal would open the door to significant abuses of personnel
requirements that are already very weak. Why should we not be concerned? HHS is
allowing Wisconsin and North Dakota to flaunt the law with single task worker
programs that violate the current regulations.”
She noted that Wisconsin signed an agreement with the
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (then the Health Care Financing
Administration) in December 2000 to phase out its illegal program. The Federal
Register notice describes the program favorably and indicates it is still in
place.
Lenhoff said HHS has been reckless in its nursing home
staffing policies – last summer, for example, bypassing public notice and
comment to issue a decision that nursing homes can use untrained, unscreened
workers to transport residents.
“It must have seemed like an insignificant matter to
Secretary Thompson,” said Lenhoff. “But at the Senate Special Committee on
Aging hearing on physical abuse in nursing homes March 4, we heard what tragic
consequences can occur when staff don’t perform competently.”
At the hearing, a witness testified that his mother, who
was in the hospital for a medical evaluation, suffered a broken finger when the
hospital bed she was being transported in “was negligently pushed against a
steel doorframe.” The hospital transferred her to a nursing home for
rehabilitation, where she was killed by a worker who had been fired from two
other facilities for aggressive treatment of residents.
“Don’t these kinds of incidents, which occur so
frequently, beg for better training, supervision and screening of workers, not
less?” asked Lenhoff.
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