Guardian Not Personally Liable For Alleged Lack of “Due Care”
APRIL 27, 2009 VOLUME 16, NUMBER 38 Who has the obligation to get a proper Medicaid application filed for someone in a nursing home? Can the nursing home resident’s children, spouse, guardian or conservator be forced to pay for care after the patient’s money has run out but before the state Medicaid agency receives the […]
Discharge From Nursing Home Must Describe Placement Plans
APRIL 18, 2005 VOLUME 12, NUMBER 42 Samuel Paschall apparently posed some risk to himself and to the other residents of The Washington Home in Washington, D.C. From the day of his first admission to the nursing facility he had been closely monitored because he was difficult to handle, and becoming more so as time […]
LPNs Awarded Damages In Wrongful Termination Case
APRIL 26, 2004 VOLUME 11, NUMBER 43 When LPNs Diane Owens and Alisa Main were fired from their jobs with Fayetteville Health and Rehabilitation Center in April, 2000, they were sure their dismissals were retribution. Ms. Owens and Ms. Main had each complained to Kristy Unkel, the Director of Nursing, about the care provided by […]
Medicaid Beneficiary’s Alimony Payments Allowed to Continue
FEBRUARY 9, 2004 VOLUME 11, NUMBER 32 When someone in a nursing home qualifies for Medicaid, he or she will usually still have to pay a portion of the nursing home bill. In some cases this can mean that the resident must pay more than his or her income—or risk eviction from the nursing home. […]
Daughter Who Took Mother’s Money May Owe Nursing Bills
SEPTEMBER 15, 2003 VOLUME 11, NUMBER 11 Betty Budd spent the last years of her life at Presbyterian Medical Center, a nursing home in Oakmont, Pennsylvania. When she died she owed $96,000 to the facility, and only had $28,000 left in her estate. After collecting that amount, the nursing home filed suit against Ms. Budd’s […]
Purchase of Life Interest Does Not Gain Medicaid Coverage
JULY 7, 2003 VOLUME 11, NUMBER 1 Qualifying a family member for Medicaid assistance with the cost of nursing home care can be complicated. When Pat Monroe’s mother went into a nursing home in Arkansas, Ms. Monroe had a clever idea: she had her mother buy an interest in her own home. Unfortunately for her […]
Fund Earmarked For Nursing Homes Frozen In Budget Crisis
DECEMBER 9, 2002 VOLUME 10, NUMBER 23 Nursing home operators, often joined by advocates of better care for seniors and the disabled, have maintained that government-set payment rates for nursing homes are inadequate to ensure quality care. Most of the focus of those complaints falls on Medicaid reimbursement rates and, to a lesser extent, Medicare […]
Nursing Home Fined $320,000 Over Care of Ventilator Patients
AUGUST 19, 2002 VOLUME 10, NUMBER 7 When a nursing home demonstrates that it is unable to provide consistent quality care there are several ways to correct its problems. The marketplace offers one corrective opportunity, of course. Personal injury lawsuits may effect some improvement in future care, if only because the nursing home’s insurance provider […]
Long Term Care Industry Must Be Accountable, Says Advocate
AUGUST 21, 2000 VOLUME 8, NUMBER 8 By Patricia Nelson* I disagree with a recent Elder Law Issues assertion that higher reimbursement rates are automatically required to meet nursing home staffing needs (see More On DHHS/HCFA Report Of Nursing Home Staff Shortages). Before such conclusions can be made, I await Sen. Charles Grassley’s US Committee […]
More On DHHS/HCFA Report Of Nursing Home Staff Shortages
AUGUST 7, 2000 VOLUME 8, NUMBER 6 Last week Elder Law Issues reported on a government study of nursing home staffing and safety. This week we continue that report. The full DHHS/HCFA report is now online.] As described last week, the Department of Health and Human Services report recommends minimum staffing levels for nursing aides, […]