Home About Us Attorneys Contact Us Newsletter
Workers Compensation Attorneys Ithaca
Areas of Practice Include Workers Compensation and Social Security Disability
Workers’ Compensation
Personal Injury Law
Social Security Disability
Collaborative Family Law
Other Areas of Practice
Security Code
Legal Dictionary
Video Library
State Resources
Statute of Limitations
 
Todays Legal Headlines
 
Ithaca Social Security Disability Lawyer

October 3 2007 - Clinton and Grassley call for nursing home abuse investigation

US Senators Hilary Clinton (D-NY) and Charles Grassley (R-Iowa) want find out if nursing home abuse and neglect are more prevalent in those homes which are owned by private Wall Street equity firms. Both Senators are requesting the Government Accountability Office to conduct an investigation into the situation. The Senators´ actions come as a response to a New York Times investigation that found that the quality of care at nursing homes substantially decreased when they were acquired by private investors.

The New York Times investigation provided evidence of drastic cost cutting measures imposed on nursing homes, and that nursing home neglect and abuse became far more likely after private investor acquisition.  There has been a growing trend of private investment firms looking to nursing homes as a possible route to easy money.  Firms buy the nursing home facilities, then drastically reduce their costs, and then turn around and sell them at huge profits.
 
Private investment groups have been targeting some of the biggest nursing home concerns, in turn affecting the care of millions of patients.  Just this August, the private equity firm Carlyle Group won antitrust clearance to buy Manor Care Inc, the largest U.S. nursing home owner for $4.9 billion. Another chain, Genesis Healthcare Corp. agreed to be bought by private equity in January, and Beverly Enterprises went private in 2005.

But these acquisitions could be coming at a great cost to nursing home patients.  According to the New York Times investigation, facilities owned by private investment firms score worse than national rates in 12 of 14 indicators regulators used to track ailments of nursing home residents.   And the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services says that residents of such nursing homes suffer more from depression, loss of mobility and the loss of the ability to dress and bath themselves.   And both federal and state regulators told the New York Times that citations for quality-of-care deficiencies, like moldy food and restraining residents for long periods of time, rose at every large nursing home chain that was acquired by a private investment group.

Unfortunately, these privately-owned nursing homes are not always subject to the same legal consequences that other facilities would face for providing inadequate care to nursing home patients.  Normally, the family of a resident suffering from nursing home abuse or neglect might sue the home’s owners, and regulators could impose stiff fines if conditions weren’t up to standard.   But private investment firms have created complex corporate structures that obscure exactly who owns a nursing home, making lawsuits more difficult.  And the complex ownership structure also means that sometimes managers can even legally bypass Medicare and Medicaid reporting requirements.

In making his request to the GAO, Grassley asked that the agency analyze the number of private equity deals involving nursing homes, and quality and safety issues before and after changes in ownership. Clinton asked for an assessment of 63 firms in particular that the GAO cited in March as having a troubled history.

Advocates for nursing home residents can only hope that the Senators’ requests will eventually lead Congress to take action that will make private equity firms responsible for the nursing home abuse and neglect that occurs at the facilities they own.
<< back



The information you obtain at this site is not, nor is it intended to be, legal advice. You should consult an attorney for individual advice regarding your own situation.

Home    |    About Us    |    Attorneys    |    Contact Us    |    Newsletter
308 North Tioga Street Suite 2, Ithaca, NY 14850 (607)277-7527 11 Court St, Auburn, NY 13021 (315) 253-8967
Copyright © 2008 Littman & Babiarz, All rights reserved. Disclaimer
Ithaca Workers Compensation Attorneys and Social Security Disability Lawyers serving the communities of Ithaca, Auburn, Auburn, Canandaigua, Geneseo, Geneva, Hammondsport, Ithaca, Naples, Newark, Palmyra, Penn Yan, Rochester, Seneca Falls, Skaneateles, Sodus Point, Trumansburg, Victor, Watkins Glen, Cayuga County, Cortland County, Livingston County, Monroe County, Onondaga County, Ontario County, Seneca County, Schuyler County, and all upstate New York communities in the Finger Lakes Region.