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Related: About this forumNursing Home Owners Drained Cash While Residents Deteriorated, State Filings Suggest, NY State: NPR
- Nursing home owners drained cash while residents deteriorated, state filings suggest, NPR, Jan. 31, 2023. Ed.
After the nursing home where Leann Sample worked was bought by private investors, it started falling apart. Literally. Part of a ceiling collapsed on a nurse, the air conditioning conked out regularly, and a toilet once burst on Sample while she was helping a resident in the bathroom, she recalled in a court deposition. "It's a disgusting place," Sample, a nurse aide, testified in 2021. The decrepit conditions Sample described weren't due to a lack of money. Over seven years, The Villages of Orleans Health & Rehabilitation Center, located in western New York near Lake Ontario, paid nearly $16 million in rent to its landlord a company that was owned by the same investors who owned the nursing home, court records show.
From those coffers, the owners paid themselves and family members nearly $10 million, while residents injured themselves falling, developed bedsores, missed medications, and stewed in their urine and feces because of a shortage of aides, New York authorities allege. At the height of the pandemic, lavish payments flowed into real estate, management, and staffing companies financially linked to nursing home owners throughout New York, which requires facilities to file the nation's most detailed financial reports. Nearly half the state's 600-plus nursing homes hired companies run or controlled by their owners, frequently paying them well above the cost of services, a KHN analysis found, while the federal government was giving the facilities hundreds of millions in fiscal relief.
In 2020, these affiliated corporations collectively amassed profits of $269 million, yielding average margins of 27%, while the nursing homes that hired them were strained by staff shortages, harrowing injuries, and mounting deaths from COVID-19, state records reveal. "Even during the worst year of New York's pandemic, when homes were desperately short of staffing and their residents were dying by the thousands, some owners managed to come out millions of dollars ahead," said Bill Hammond, a senior fellow at the Empire Center for Public Policy, a think tank in Albany, New York.
Some nursing home owners moved money from their facilities through corporate arrangements that are widespread, and legal, in every state.
Nationally, nearly 9,000 for-profit nursing homes the majority outsource crucial services such as nursing staff, management, and medical supplies to affiliated corporations, known as "related parties," that their owners own, invest in or control, federal records show. Many nursing homes don't even own their buildings they rent the space from a related company. Homes pay related parties more than $12 billion a year, but federal regulators do not make them reveal how much they charge above the cost of services, and how much money ends up in owners' bank accounts. In some instances, draining nursing home coffers through related parties may amount to fraud. Along with The Villages' investors, a handful of other New York owners are facing lawsuits from Attorney General Letitia James that claim they pocketed millions from their enterprises that the authorities say should have been used for patient care.
.. 'A dog would get better care'... https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2023/01/31/1139783599/new-york-nursing-home-owners-drained-cash
bucolic_frolic
(47,643 posts)We have this "view" of business as benign, caring, for the public good. Business is for profit. Raking in profits and in some cases skimming cash off the froth is a way of life. Public perception is important to remain a viable entity and for growth.
3Hotdogs
(13,588 posts)2naSalit
(93,571 posts)Stargazer99
(3,021 posts)profits and if someone suffers they figure so what and the common man puts up with this...just how stupid is the general public?
appalachiablue
(43,121 posts)practices, real estate apt. bldgs., single family homes, and more. The general public is unaware of all of this. It's a sad state of affairs and we're on the road to serfdom (again) some say...
Warpy
(113,131 posts)The facility I'm in is owned by one of those umbrella companies, the umbrella protecting only the fat cat major shareholders. Fortuneatly, I don't need much, just rides to my doctor appointments and the like. If I hadn't gone blind, I'd have stayed in my own disaster of a home. I can see some of the places they're cutting corners, though.
I have a one bedroom apartment that costs less than half as much as a single room for my dad would have cost 20 years ago in Florida, so I can't complain much. The scent of pot smoke in the halls late at night is telling me this is where I need to be.
appalachiablue
(43,121 posts)is affordable esp. compared to the FL relative.
I'm looking at a possible move and am dreading the search process.
The current community was fine and had a nice vibe and but many people left after one of the big cos. took over. In the transition and overhaul, the place has been downgraded, esp. mgmt.
It was great while it lasted but likely time to move on. All the best and watch those fumes!