Monday, June 30, 2025

Killing Us Slowly…..

 

I became aware today of a Brown University study that estimates the current Trump tax cut bill will close about 580 nursing homes. Since the average nursing home has about 109 beds that means 63,220 people will be out on the street or worse.  Where do politicians (more septically the Republican party) think these people will go?  And why don’t they seem to care?

Over the course of my career – I have probably been in at least 50 different nursing homes in Wisconsin and Minnesota.  The care I have observed in most of those places is managed to be adequate to barely adequate.  By that I mean like all businesses they are managed to make money.  Unless they are privately financed by a foundation or high paying patients, that typically means there is minimal staffing and the most qualified people are typically RNs who spend most of their shift managing medications and medical problems.  That can mean long waits for medicines or care.  It can also mean that behavioral problems like agitation or overt aggression are allowed to escalate to a dangerous point.

When I first started doing assessments in nursing homes it was 1986.  In those days, there were very few diagnoses of Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) or vascular dementia (VD) since the NINCDS-ARDA criteria were not widely known.  Most of the people I was seeing had diagnoses of arteriosclerotic dementia, arteriosclerosis, or hardening of the arteries. At some point very early in this timeline, there was an initiative to make sure that old people with psychiatric diagnoses did not get admitted to nursing homes.  But like all political initiatives it was not always an either-or situation.  I would frequently see people with schizophrenia and bipolar disorder who had developed AD, VD, Parkinson’s plus syndromes, or tardive syndromes in addition to the primary psychiatric disorder.  In many of those situations a subsequent rule about tapering antipsychotic medications to prevent oversedation and associated morbidities became a problem because of the need for maintenance medication.

Psychiatric services are needed in nursing homes for all of those reasons but they are rare.  The reason they are rare is funding – specifically rationing psychiatric services by both Medicare and Medicaid. I ran a Geriatric Psychiatry and Memory Disorders Clinic for a decade and we eventually closed because we could not maintain an adequate work quality and get adequate reimbursement. For a time, my clinic nurse and I decided to go out into nursing homes and see patients there to make it more convenient for patients, families and staff and see if it made a difference. We were reimbursed at an even lower rate for those efforts.  My speculation is that most of the psychiatric care and treatment in nursing homes is done by nonpsychiatrists and probably nonphysicians.  This in part is an additional reason for low quality care in most nursing homes.

Let’s consider the impact of all of these nursing home closures. First, it will greatly add to the current burden of emergency department (ED) congestion.  There is always a steady influx of nursing home patients to the ED with new diagnoses (pneumonia, urinary tract infections, cellulitis, etc). With further reductions in staffing, it may be more difficult to get them back.  I can recall one of my social work colleagues calling 22 different nursing homes one day to discharge one of our stable patients.  None of them would accept that patient. We were under intense pressure from the hospital at the time to discharge that patient because we needed to admit patients from the ED.  That whole chain of events will get worse – not the least due to the fact that far fewer nursing homes will accept people who have been admitted to an acute care psychiatric unit. There will be backups all around – on inpatient units and in the ED.  The same chain of events will occur on medical and surgical units who often put pressure on psychiatry to take their “stable” nursing home patients who may have a psychiatric disorder.

There will also be a steady-state of patients bouncing in and out of the ED-inpatient psychiatry or medicine-discharge sequence.  This is a familiar pattern in many hospital subpopulations that usually occurs because of a lack of adequate housing.  Expect to see more elderly nursing patients captured by this cycle.

Will there be excessive mortality and morbidity?  Of course there will be.  In the course of my career, I had to discharge patient to nursing homes where I knew they could not get the level of care they got on my inpatient unit.   I worked with highly skilled RNs – 4 on the day shift, 3 on the evening shift, and one on nights with 3, 2, and 2 nursing assistants respectively covering 20 beds. We cared for patients with complex medical problems that required frequent monitoring and intervention.  I knew there was no nursing home that I could discharge them to where they would get the same level of care and that would be a problem for them.

I have also walked in to a nursing home and seen the results with my own eyes. I recall visiting a 92 yr old woman with congestive heart failure and hypertension.  She was obtunded, cyanotic, and barely responsive.  When I asked the staff to check her oximetry and start oxygen they produced a nursing supervisor instead for a discussion.  When the oximetry was finally done it was 60% and she regained a normal conscious state with oxygen.  The assessment I made only required knowing this patient’s baseline state and asking what had happened given her chronic conditions.  Is that too much to ask in the case of nursing home staff?

In another more recent case – a 92 yr old man had C. difficile colitis following extended antibiotic therapies for COVID-19.   During that time his body weight went from 130 to 87 lbs (he was 5’10” tall).  He was weak and barely able to ambulate. Despite the C. difficile diagnosis there were no infection control precautions and he shared a bathroom with 3 roommates.  Despite his clinical status (barely able to walk, not able to eat, BMI of 12.1) the insurance company paying for his care insisted that he be discharged home under the care of his family where he died the next day.  

Both of these cases are examples of low-quality care.  Rationing care is the most likely reason.  In one case the rationing is implicit (low staffing based on the need for profits from reimbursement) and explicit (inappropriate utilization review decision).   It all comes back to reimbursement.

A final consideration is that the funding cuts go far beyond nursing home care.  The most conservative estimate I have found is that the cuts would increase the number of uninsured by 7.8 million people and reduce Medicaid enrollment for 10.3 million.  Hospitals are legally obligated to treat all people with acute care conditions whether they have insurance or not. That means that many of these people will be in the ED-inpatient-discharge steady state cycle taking up beds.  They will also more likely be acutely ill and spend more time in the hospital.  All of that care is unreimbursed.  That means higher health care costs and premiums for everyone.  One projection is a doubling of premiums.  This is essentially another tax on the average American who is just trying to break even.  All of that is to provide tax cuts for billionaires and businesses while still incurring a 3-5 trillion dollar deficient.

It also means less access to hospital beds when you need it.  I have illustrated on this blog what can happen when you don’t have timely hospital bed access for what is considered a routine condition.

In the final analysis, nursing home care in the United States is seriously rationed care. Although there are some high-end nursing homes that require additional reimbursement and provide more supportive environments most are not operating at that level.  They provide the basic function of providing care on a 24/7 basis to a severely disabled person that the family cannot care for.  Even that is a recent concept in American society.  As an example, one of my elderly ancestors had a closed head injury as a result of blast injury. He lived at a time when there were no nursing homes in his area only a poor farm, that cared for the indigent and poor elderly.  He had a problem with severe aggression and would routinely wreck all of the furniture in the house. I never learned how they were able to contain this behavior, but the modern question is whether this is an acceptable standard for families.  Can family members be expected to contain severe aggression from a family member with dementia and keep everyone safe?  I don’t see how.      

Severely rationing health care hurts us all…

 

George Dawson, MD, DFAPA


Photo Credit:  Thanks to Rick Ziegler for the thunderstorm photo. 

No comments:

Post a Comment