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Lenhoff Remarks 5/9/02 Lenhoff Remarks 5/9/02
Donna Lenhoff’s Remarks at
Congressional Staff Briefing On the Need for Federal Staffing
Standards -- May 9, 2002
The National Citizens’ Coalition for Nursing Home Reform
was founded in 1975 to be an advocate for quality care for residents in nursing
homes. Some might find it surprising, then, that the first report we ever
published was about the plight of the nurse aide. It was because we had already
discovered that the plight of the nurse aide and the plight of the nursing home
resident are intertwined. If the
worker who is closest to the resident is unable to give good care because of
understaffing, poor training, and weak support and supervision from licensed
nurses, the resident suffers – and often suffers very badly, as you have
already heard this afternoon.
Inadequate nurse staffing was a critical problem in nursing
homes in 1975. The Department of Health, Education and Welfare was already
considering mandatory nurse-to-resident staffing ratios to ensure that Medicare
and Medicaid beneficiaries got adequate care. And understaffing has been a
critical problem in every year since. It doesn’t matter whether the economy is
good or bad or the unemployment rate is high or low. It doesn’t matter whether
reimbursement rates are too low – as they are in some states – or
exorbitant, as they were under Medicare through much of the 90s. Understaffing
is always a problem.
Inadequate staffing is a chronic
problem that will not be solved by quick fixes – such as CMS’s recent
proposed regulation to allow nursing homes to use minimally trained and poorly
supervised “feeding assistants” to help residents who are too frail to eat
without assistance. It will not be solved by increasing Medicare or Medicaid
reimbursement without holding providers accountable for ensuring that they staff
their facilities adequately. Understaffing is a problem that calls for a
permanent solution – and as soon as possible.
Fortunately, we have seen some progress since 1975: Today,
thanks to Charlene Harrington, Jack Schnelle, Andy Kramer at the University of
Colorado, and others, we know how many licensed nurses and nursing assistants it
takes to care for a nursing home resident. The findings from the two major
studies in the report to Congress, the years of research and analysis that went
into developing the standards NCCNHR members endorsed in 1998 – all have been
consistent in their findings that the typical nursing home resident needs more
than four hours of direct care a day from professional nurses and nursing
assistants.
We have the research and we know the solution. We must
therefore move forward with a serious debate about how we will achieve the
outcome – for we surely know that the nursing home horror stories will
continue unless we do something. Fifty-two percent of nursing homes are
critically, dangerously understaffed. Most of the rest can’t give good care.
We must do something.
Rep. Waxman will soon introduce a bill that would implement
staffing standards. We strongly support his efforts to provide the legislative
vehicle for this debate.
NCCNHR believes that minimum nurse staffing ratios will
become law as more and more Americans experience the pain of a loved one’s
unnecessary suffering in an understaffed nursing facility. States
– such as Florida – are already showing that these staffing levels can be
implemented .
There is a tremendous public will to see it happen. At a
press conference this morning, NCCNHR presented Congress with the names of
almost 100,000 voters in 49 states who signed a petition saying that unnecessary
suffering, illness and death caused by understaffing must stop. These voters
support mandatory staffing standards.
Two of the family members who supported our petition drive
are in the room today and would be glad to take your questions – Nadene
Mitcham of Michigan and Belinda Clay of Florida.
Both of these women readjusted their personal lives so they
could visit their mothers in their nursing homes every day to make sure they got
good care – and to provide much of it themselves, because the nursing homes
were understaffed. Nadene’s mother is no longer living, but Nadene continues
her visits to support other residents. Belinda continues to care for her mother,
although she has been able to go back to work part time because Florida’s
mandatory staffing law has improved the care. Unfortunately, most residents do
not have immediate families who can make these kinds of commitments – many
have outlived their families or their children live in other states. They depend
on us to assure good care.
So our petition drive resonated strongly with the American
public. Many family members and also nursing home workers wrote us notes saying
how strongly they felt about the effort:
From a local ombudsman in Colorado: “You can’t expect one nurse to handle 30 to 40 residents during an
eight-hour shift. The situation is beyond critical!”
A Florida family member: “My father was in a nursing home and broke his hip due to lack of
supervision. More nurses and CNAs might have saved him the injury.”
From Georgia: “Please
add my name to your petition. It seems the only way to help our loved ones and
future nursing home residents is to change the laws. I’d love to help!”
From Illinois: “Please
add my name to your petition for more nurses in nursing homes. I have a mother
with Alzheimer’s and I’m sure I will face the nursing home decision in the
near future. I want her to have a safe environment!”
From Kentucky: “I
am currently a CNA. I would like to have my name added to the petition for
staffing regulations. I go to different nursing homes to work, and in many of
them 20 to 30 residents [per CNA] is the ‘norm.’ I am appalled at the care
these residents get and I want to help in any way I can.”
From Oklahoma: “My
grandmother died almost two years ago of neglect in the nursing home. Her
bedsores turned into gangrene.”
From Tennessee: “My
grandmother was in an understaffed nursing home before she died. Please add my
name to your petition.”
From West Virginia: “I
have worked as a nursing assistant in several different nursing homes. We have
always been short of staff. When we are short, it will be one aide to 27-29
residents. To bathe, feed, change and turn. We work 12-hour shifts. How much
time does each resident get for quality care? I am there for the residents, and
it just isn’t fair to me or them. Tell what can be done to change things.”
From Virginia: “I
had a loved one in a nursing home for five years. I know that the only way the
residents of long term care facilities will get good care is to mandate the
staffing ratios.”
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