New Protections for Nursing Home Residents
New Obama-era rules designed to give nursing home residents more control of their care are gradually going into effect. The rules give residents more options regarding meals and visitation as well as make changes to discharge and grievance procedures.
Posted on June 12, 2017
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid finalized the rules -- the first comprehensive update to nursing home regulations since 1991 -- in November 2016. The first group of new rules took effect in November; the rest will be phased in over the next two years.
Here are some of the new rules now in effect:
- Visitors. The new rules allow residents to have visitors of the resident's choosing and at the time the resident wants, meaning the facility cannot impose visiting hours. There are also rules about who must have immediate access to a resident, including a resident's representative. For more information, click here.
- Meals. Nursing homes must make meals and snacks available when residents want to eat, not just at designated meal times.
- Roommates. Residents can choose their roommate as long as both parties agree.
- Grievances. Each nursing home must designate a grievance official whose job it is to make sure grievances are properly resolved. In addition, residents must be free from the fear of discrimination for filing a grievance. The nursing home also has to put grievance decisions in writing. For more information, click here.
- Transfer and Discharge. The new rules require more documentation from a resident's physician before the nursing home can transfer or discharge a resident based on an inability to meet the resident's needs. The nursing home also cannot discharge a patient for nonpayment if Medicaid is considering a payment claim. For more information, click here.
CMS also enacted a rule forbidding nursing homes from entering into binding arbitration agreements with residents or their representatives before a dispute arises. However,a nursing home association sued to block the new rule and a U.S. district court has granted an injunction temporarily preventing CMS from implementing it. The Trump Administration is reportedly planning to lift this ban on nursing home arbitration clauses.
In November 2017, rules regarding facility assessment, psychotropic drugs and medication review, and care plans, among others, will go into effect. The final set of regulations covering infection control and ethics programs will take effect in November 2019.
To read the rules, click here.
More from our blog…
Seven Ways to Distribute Your Personal Property Fairly
Unlike money, personal belongings usually can't be divided equally after their owner passes away. For this reason, distributing possessions like furniture, jewelry, dishes, silverware, artwork, [...]
Capacity Requirements for Executing Estate Planning Documents
Proper execution of a legal instrument requires that the person signing have sufficient mental "capacity" to understand the implications of the document. While most people [...]
What You Should Know About Long-Term Care
Research shows that roughly one in seven adults aged 65 or older will need long-term care at some point in their later years. Meanwhile, tens of millions [...]
Understanding Medicaid: What Does Medicaid Cover?
In the complex and frequently changing landscape of health care in the United States, Medicaid stands out as a vital program. Since 1965, it has [...]
Recent blog posts
FREE WEBINAR
5 Things to Know About
Estate Planning
When You Turn Sixty-Five