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Low Staffing and Poor Quality of Care at
Nation’s For-Profit Nursing Homes
November 29, 2011--The nation’s largest
for-profit nursing homes deliver
significantly lower quality of care
because they typically have fewer staff
nurses than non-profit and
government-owned nursing homes.
That’s the finding of a new UCSF-led
analysis of quality of care at nursing homes
around the country. It is the first-ever
study focusing solely on staffing and
quality at the 10 largest for-profit chains.
The article is published online in advance
of print publication in
Health Services Research.
“Poor quality of care is endemic in many
nursing homes, but we found that the most
serious problems occur in the largest
for-profit chains,” said first author Charlene
Harrington, RN, PhD, professor
emeritus of sociology and nursing at the
UCSF School of Nursing. Harrington also is
director of the UCSF National Center for
Personal Assistance Services.
“The top 10 chains have a strategy of
keeping labor costs low to increase
profits,” Harrington said. “They are not
making quality a priority.”
Low nurse staffing levels are considered the
strongest predictor of poor nursing home
quality.
The 10 largest for-profit chains operate
about 2,000 nursing homes in the United
States, controlling approximately 13 percent
of the country’s nursing home beds.
In recent decades, nursing home chains have
undergone a considerable expansion.A number
of chains were publicly-traded companies
until the early 2000s, when five of the
country’s largest chains went bankrupt.
Following restructuring and ownership
changes, as well as increases in Medicare
payments, the largest chains became more
financially stable. More recently, some of
the largest publicly held chains were
purchased by private equity investment
firms, which invest funds received from
investors, with whom they share profits and
losses.
The researchers compared staffing levels and
facility deficiencies at the for-profit
chains to those at homes run by five other
ownership groups to measure quality of care.
The 10 largest chains were selected because
they are influential in the nursing home
industry and are the most successful in
terms of growth and market share.
The study found that for-profit homes strive
to keep their costs down by reducing
staffing, particularly RN staffing.
Recent Medicare cuts in payment rates for
nursing home residents – by 11 percent in
October, 2011 – may further jeopardize the
health and safety of residents if the chains
respond by reducing staffing and wages,
Harrington said.
The 10 largest for-profit chains in 2008
were HCR Manor Care, Golden Living, Life
Care Centers of America, Kindred Healthcare,
Genesis HealthCare Corporation, Sun Health
Care Group, Inc., SavaSeniorCare LLC,
Extendicare Health Services, Inc., National
Health Care Corporation, and Skilled
HealthCare, LLC.
From 2003 to 2008, these chains had fewer
nurse “staffing hours” than non-profit and
government nursing homes when controlling
for other factors. Together, these companies
had the sickest residents, but their total
nursing hours were 30 percent lower than
non-profit and government nursing homes.
Moreover, the top chains were well below the
national average for RN and total nurse
staffing, and below the minimum nurse
staffing recommended by experts.
The 10 largest for-profit chains were cited
for 36 percent more deficiencies and 41
percent more serious deficiencies than the
best facilities. Deficiencies include
failure to prevent pressure sores, resident
weight loss, falls, infections, resident
mistreatment, poor sanitary conditions, and
other problems that could seriously harm
residents.
The study also found that the four largest
for-profit nursing home chains purchased by
private equity companies between 2003 and
2008 had more deficiencies after being
acquired. The study is the first to make the
connection between worse care following
acquisition by private equity companies.
The authors said that more study is needed
on the subject. They also said that greater
accountability and quality oversight
mechanisms would help improve nursing home
care, along with effective funding
incentives and sanctions for low staffing
and poor quality.
UCSF is a leading university dedicated to
promoting health worldwide through advanced
biomedical research, graduate-level
education in the life sciences and health
professions, and excellence in patient care.