Die-hard Obamacare defenders are out in force over July 4th to protest Republican repeal efforts. The protesters are falsely claiming repeal will gut Medicaid, causing frail, indigent seniors to be evicted from nursing homes. It’s sheer demagoguery. But even these phony claims could have redeeming value if they get the public to take a closer look at nursing homes and see the filth, rampant infections, and neglect. Conditions routinely tolerated by our indifferent public officials.
Indifference is the real culprit, not inadequate Medicaid money. For example, New York State pays among the highest Medicaid rates in the nation — yet also tolerates some of the worst conditions. A shocking 40 percent of nursing homes in New York provide inferior care, according to federal ratings. That’s worse than 39 other states.
Nationwide, one-third of nursing home residents suffer serious, often permanent injuries due to neglect, according to a federal Inspector General report.
Incontinent patients languish in soiled diapers that lead to sores and infections; patients unable to eat and drink on their own develop severe dehydration; others suffer falls and internal injuries because of medical errors or over-medication.
The deadliest problem is infection. A staggering 380,000 nursing home patients a year die from infections, according to federal estimates. Not all are preventable. But nursing homes are infection cauldrons. The routine precautions taken in hospitals to limit infections — such as testing patients for superbugs on admission, disinfecting rooms and equipment, and keeping infected patients apart from others — are ignored in nursing homes.
Patients with Staph infections are rolled into communal dining rooms and seated next to other patients. Superbugs contaminate bedrails, curtains, and rehab equipment. Caregivers tasked with bathing and grooming patients go from one bed to the next, without using disposable gowns and gloves, spreading bacteria from patient to patient.
Because even rudimentary infection prevention is lacking, one quarter of patients pick up dangerous, drug-resistant bacteria, according to new research by Columbia University School of Nursing. Columbia’s Carolyn Herzig warns infection rates are increasing across the board and action is urgently needed.
Medicaid recently adopted new standards calling for more infection precautions but delayed the start date to November 2019. Why delay, when hundreds of thousands of elderly patients will die from infection in the meantime?
Don’t count on the media to cover these deaths. The Washington Post is busy claiming repeal “takes a sledge hammer to Medicaid.” The New York Times reports that “steep cuts to Medicaid” will force some seniors out of their nursing homes. Here’s the truth: there are no “cuts.” Medicaid spending will continue to increase every year, though at a slower rate.
The real threat to seniors isn’t Medicaid funding levels. It’s that Medicaid officials tolerate substandard nursing home care, when they could use the program’s market clout to demand safer care. About 66 percent of long term patients are paid for by Medicaid.
The federal government rates nursing homes from one-star to five-stars, based on periodic inspections, staffing levels, infection rates, and other quality measures. But even nursing homes that get the lowest one-star rating year after year — indicating substandard care — are allowed to stay open. They should be shut down.
From Baton Rouge to Chicago, and in smaller towns across the country, protesters and Democratic politicians are fear-mongering that seniors will die on the streets if repeal passes. Cuomo is holding healthcare events across New York this week, parroting the Democratic Party’s false claims.
In truth, Cuomo’s one of the culprits. On his watch, low-rated nursing homes are getting paid by Medicaid. New York has begun rewarding top rated homes with slightly higher payments — an idea worth duplicating in other states. But Cuomo and other politicians need to do more to stand up to the powerful nursing home industry.
Frail, elderly nursing home patients shouldn’t be made to suffer. That’s the goal protesters and politicians should focus on. Enough with the partisan scare tactics.
Betsy McCaughey is a patient advocate, and is chairman of the Committee to Reduce Infection Deaths. She is also a constitutional scholar, syndicated columnist, regular contributor on Fox News and CNBC, and former lieutenant governor of New York. In 1993 she read the 1,362-page Clinton health bill, warned the nation of what it said, and made history. McCaughey earned her Ph.D. in constitutional history from Columbia University. She is author of "Beating Obamacare 2014" and "Government by Choice: Inventing the United States Constitution." For more of Betsy's reports, Go Here Now.
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