The future looks grim as nursing homes face a loss of confidence in their
ability to provide good care and as state budgets, which determine the level of
nursing home reimbursement through Medicaid (the homes' major source of revenue), are
strained by the recession. What, then, will become of nursing homes after the
deluge?
In a provocative essay, Charles Sabatino of the American Bar Association
argues that “it’s time to defund nursing homes.” Institutional care as defined
by the average American nursing home, he suggests, is simply not what old people
or their families want. It’s demeaning, disrespectful, and disgraceful.
Moreover, to those who claim the institutional environment is necessary to keep
the oldest, frailest members of society safe, the monumental failure of nursing
homes to prevent sickness and death during the COVID-19 pandemic provides ample
evidence that even in this arena, the nursing home is a failure. Medicare and
Medicaid, which together fund a large proportion of skilled nursing home care
(Medicare pays for short term rehabilitative care while Medicaid pays for
long-term residential care) hold the key. They should pay for care only,
Sabatino says, if the nursing homes are small and homey, provide all their
residents with private rooms and bathrooms, and embody a culture focused on the
goals, interests, and preferences of their residents—not the nurses, nursing
assistants, administrators, and others who run the institution.
Geriatrician,
palliative care specialist, and health care policy expert Joanne Lynn distinguishes among the various populations found in nursing homes and suggests
different strategies for each group. People recently discharged from a hospital
who need short-term rehabilitation or further medical care that they cannot
receive at home—the “post-acute” patients who stay in skilled nursing facilities
for a few days or at most a few weeks and whose care is paid for by Medicare—can
continue to receive this type of treatment in a hospital-lite environment.
People with severe brain damage, whether from dementia, stroke, or prolonged
lack of oxygen, and who are unaware of their surroundings and do not recognize
their family members can likewise remain in a hospital-style institution. People
who are dying and who need more assistance than can be provided through
home-hospice should not have to go to a skilled nursing facility under the guise
that they need rehabilitation in order to have 24-hour, residential care.
Instead, they should be eligible for inpatient hospice. That leaves the large
fraction of the current nursing home population who are dependent on others for
many of their basic daily needs—bathing, dressing, walking—due to multiple
physical problems and/or moderate dementia. For those individuals, Lynn argues,
the best environment is a model very much like what Sabatino advocates. This
type of facility already exists: it is called the Green House Project. What is
the Green House Project and how did homes built along this model fare during the
pandemic?
Green Houses are the brain child of Bill Thomas, a pioneering
geriatrician who has been designing progressively better nursing homes since he
introduced the Eden Alternative—bringing pets and plants into nursing homes—in
the early 1990s. He then went on to mastermind what would become the culture
change movement, or bringing resident-centered care to nursing homes. The model
was fleshed out by the consortium of nursing homes that banded together to form
the Pioneer Network, which advocated breaking large, hospital-style nursing
homes into multiple discrete households, eliminating the centrally-located
nurses’ station to promote integrating nursing care into daily life, and
decreasing the differentiation of labor which compartmentalized care. But while
many facilities endorse culture change, few have implemented its principles on a
wide scale. Enter the Green House. Green Houses are built along the lines
envisaged by the culture change movement—they make use of “universal workers”
rather than siloing staff members into discrete categories and they are built
around honoring the preferences of residents. But the critical difference is
that they are small. Instead of breaking a large institution into multiple
households, the Green House is a single, freestanding household with 10-12
residents. Its guiding principle is that to be homey, it needs to be built like
a home and function like a home.
The first such home was built in Tupelo,
Mississippi in 2003.
Today, there are 300 Green House sites across the country.
The big question is whether these facilities in fact improved the quality of
life for their residents. Have they been able to meet the health and safety
requirements imposed upon conventional nursing homes? Have their costs been
higher than those of standard nursing homes? And how did they fare during the
Covid-19 pandemic? The most comprehensive attempt to answer the questions about
quality of life and health and safety requirements is from the THRIVE Research
Collaborative (The Research Initiative Valuing Eldercare), published in 2016.
While the model was seldom fully implemented, the version that was utilized did
not lead to a decline in the “quality indicators” established by the Centers for
Medicare and Medicaid to evaluate nursing home care; it did lead to lower rates
of hospitalization and greater use of hospice care than conventional facilities.
Staff turnover, normally alarmingly high, was lower in Green House facilities.
Measures of resident and family satisfaction have been harder to come by as
studies tend to be very small and qualitative in nature, but enthusiastic articles have appeared in the popular press—and I cannot remember encountering
any similar level of excitement, however anecdotal, about standard nursing
homes. Based on the limited data available, I have been guardedly optimistic.
But the Covid-19 experience has tipped the scale for me: with 95 percent of
nursing homes and 92 percent of assisted living facilities reporting no cases,
the Green Houses have been remarkably successful.
Here is what we know—256 out
of the existing 298 facilities supplied data for the period March-May, 2020. In
the 229 nursing homes, which served 2384 elders, there were 32 positive cases
among residents and only one death. In the 24 assisted living facilities serving
224 elders, there were 15 positive cases and 3 deaths. Compare this to all
nursing homes in the US, as reported by CMS: as of mid-August, there have been
just under 50,000 deaths in 1.5 million residents, with slightly below 200,000
confirmed cases and another 120,000 suspected cases. I
In summary, Green House
nursing home residents were far less likely than their conventional nursing home
counterparts to contract Covid-19, and if they did get sick, they were far less
likely to die. Small really is better.
My suspicion is that after the deluge,
when the pandemic finally fizzles, legislators and healthy policy mavens will
look to new regulations to try to prevent or at least diminish the ferocity of
future outbreaks. Requiring nursing homes to have infectious disease
consultants—a rule that was instituted by the Obama administration and undone by
Trump—makes sense. Demanding regular testing for nursing assistants if there is
another viral epidemic with similar characteristics makes sense—as was recently
mandated by CMS for nursing homes during Covid-19. Systematically engaging
residents and families in discussions of their preferences regarding end of life
care before they are faced with a crisis is good generally a good policy,
because nursing home residents are always at high risk of death, not just during
a pandemic.
But more effective change will not come from regulations. It will
require a wholesale rethinking of institutional long-term care. The Green House
project is a good place to start.
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