Best Nursing Homes: Behind the Rankings
On a given day, 1.5 million people are living in the nation's 16,000-plus nursing homes, and in a typical year more than 3.2 million Americans will spend at least some time in one. That's a lot of families who need to find good care, which is why U.S. News ranks and displays data about nearly every one and updates the information every quarter. The Honor Roll lists the 11 homes that have received perfect ratings for four consecutive quarters.
The U.S. News rankings rely on Nursing Home Compare, a program run by the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. CMS analyzes information on all homes enrolled in Medicare or Medicaid other than about 150 too new to provide data and gives them ratings of one to five stars overall. The homes also receive ratings of one to five stars in each of three areas: health inspections, nurse staffing, and measures of care.
At Nursing Home Compare, you can search for a specific home or for all homes in a particular state or within a certain distance of your city or ZIP code. But you can't assume that all five-star homes, or those with three or four stars, are of the same quality. There are so many homes in each rating—1,855 in the five-star and 3,661 in the four-star categories alone—that the range of performance is bound to be very wide. Nor can search terms be combined if, say, you want only five-star homes within 50 miles of a specific city.
America's Best Nursing Homes addresses these and other issues. Homes are presented in tiers within each star category, based on their total stars in all three of the major areas. The topmost tier, for example, consists only of five-star homes that got 15 stars. The next tier down is five-star homes with 14 total stars, and so on. Within each tier, homes are listed alphabetically. If you're hunting for a home by state, region, city, or ZIP code and turn up too many to be readily managed, search terms can be combined in order to narrow the results to homes that have a religious affiliation, for example, or that accept Medicare residents. Or you can launch a multipronged search, perhaps for religiously affiliated five-star Medicare homes within 50 miles of a particular city.
All of the homes in the 50 states and the District of Columbia that are included in Nursing Home Compare are in the Best Nursing Home rankings; CMS cannot evaluate a small number that take only private-pay residents. Here are more details about the measures that go into the CMS ratings.
Health inspections. Because almost all nursing homes accept Medicare or Medicaid residents, they are regulated by the federal government as well as by the states in which they operate. State survey teams conduct health inspections on behalf of CMS about every 12 to 15 months. They also investigate health-related complaints from residents, their families, and other members of the public. "Health" is broadly defined, as is evident in the 180-some items on the checklist. Besides such matters as safety of food preparation and adequacy of infection control, the list covers such issues as medication management, residents' rights and quality of life, and proper skin care. A home's rating is based on the number of deficiencies, their seriousness, and their scope, meaning the relative number of residents who were or could have been affected. Deficiencies are counted that were identified during the three most recent health inspections and in investigations of public complaints in that time frame. State inspectors also check for compliance with fire safety rules, although their findings do not factor into the CMS ratings. Best Nursing Homes displays the full range of health and fire inspection results online.
Nurse staffing. Even the best nursing care is not enough if there are too few nurses to spend much time with residents, so CMS determines average nursing time per patient per day. Homes report the average number of registered nurses, licensed practical nurses, licensed vocational nurses, and certified nurse aides who were on the payroll (agency temps are not counted) during the two weeks prior to the most recent health inspection and their number of hours worked. The information is compared with the average number of residents during the same period and crunched to determine the average number of minutes of nursing time residents got per day. A home had to provide at least 33 minutes per patient to receive five stars in the latest ratings. The actual numbers appear in the rankings online.
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Reader Comments
A God of Comfort
I'am sorry for the pain you have pasted.At this time my eyes fill with tears to know how people could be so heartless. Please excause me if perhaps you may not agree with me but as a
christian I do practice the love of God and share his living word.1 corinthias 13:1-13 SPEAKS OF LOVE - 2 CORINTHIANS 1-11 ALSO WILL SPEAK OF THE GOD OF ALL COMFORT PLEASE READ. FOR GOD DIED FOR OUR SINS AND LOVE. I LOOK FORWARD TO SPEAKING TO YOU SOON AND KNOW GOD HEARS YOUR PRAYERS AND HE SENDS HIS ANGELS AS A PROTECTION FOR US.OUR JOBS SHOULD BE CARRY ON AS MEANS OF LOVE AND CARE. GOD SEES ALL AND HEARS ALL OUR PRAYERS. MUST GO NOW. PLEASE CONTACT ME TO CONTINUE TO TALK AND PRAY.AMEN
GOD BLESS PEACE LOVE AND HEALTH
Nursing Home Crimes
Here's the evidence posted on my blogsite they killed my mother and four other patients after we complained to local, state and federal agencies:
www.sunhealthcaregroupinc.blogspot.com
Nursing Home Crimes
Continued from above/below.....
Dr L Scott Stoney stated he quit due to the lack of response from management and called the Attorney General's office Bureau of Medical Fraud & Elder Abuse to report them. Sun had a state injunction not to understaff or have broken equipment from 2001. They knowingly violated this injuction and killed five patients I was familiar with. That amounted to zero punishment for this corporation who reward themselves with million dollar salaries while killing elderly for fun. They should be in prison.
I've asked the Grand Jury and Orange County District Attorney to indict Richard K. Matros for manslaughter / obstruction of justice and perjury just last week.
Deborah Calvert
Newport Beach, California
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