National Cancer Institute photo, Unsplash |
The angry reaction and warnings are particularly problematic for rural Americans. "As nursing home closures continue across the country, 'nursing home deserts' are expanding, and the proposed federal staffing mandate is expected to exacerbate the problem," reports of Skilled Nursing News. "This is despite attempts to make the potential policy change easier for providers in rural markets, which are especially vulnerable to access issues. Operators in these areas point to the 24-hour RN requirement as being especially devastating."
Finding nurses, let alone 24-hour nurses, is impossible in certain areas. Nate Schema, CEO of the Evangelical Lutheran Good Samaritan Society, "says the organization's facilities located in 'deep rural communities' will struggle the most with the 24-hour RN rule," n communities like Bloomfield, Nebraska, pop. 1,000, or Miller, South Dakota, pop. 1, 300, Schema isn't sure where Good Samaritan will find even six RNs; the Miller facility hasn't had a night nurse for upward of three years."
"The ability to have a nursing home open in a small town is getting more difficult because of the disparity between Medicaid reimbursement and overall costs, says Accura HealthCare CEO Ted LeNeave," reports. "Accura operates 34 communities across Iowa, Minnesota, Nebraska and South Dakota." LeNeave told : "The provider relief fund helped to mask how bad those problems were. Once that cash dried up, buildings started closing. This concept of a nursing home desert is an area where residents need nursing home care, but there's no access to them. Then they have to drive 45 minutes to an hour to be somewhere else."
Michael Beal, CEO of Care Initiatives, told , "It doesn't matter if it's 5, 10 or 15 years, if there's no additional reimbursement, it's just a timing question on when that will affect [rural operators]; it just kicks the can down the road." reports: "Beal added that the suggested rule of 'adding that an arbitrary number of staff hours per resident day without a reimbursement mechanism, and the ability to actually hire staff puts rural operators in an 'untenable situation.'"
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