Thursday, March 15, 2012
NEW NURSING HOME TAX TO BENEFIT FOR-PROFIT MEDICAID HOMES, AND HURT NON-PROFIT HOMES WITH FEWER MEDICAID BEDS
Editor's Note: NEW NURSING HOME TAX TO BENEFIT FOR-PROFIT MEDICAID HOMES, AND HURT NON-PROFIT HOMES WITH FEWER MEDICAID BEDS
A recent law was passed which will tax private pay nursing home beds and divert the money to Medicaid beds. This new law will allow the owners of for-profit nursing homes with Medicaid beds to profit even more than they do currently. While the Health Care Council of IL claims to lose $27.00/day on Medicaid beds, the homes with the most Medicaid beds are operating at a profit.
Private-pay residents at NON-profit nursing homes will incur a tax to go to the owners of FOR-profit Medicaid beds.
We can't help but wonder if those for-profit nursing homes that will receive the new tax are the same nursing homes that are favored by the Cook County Probate Court. See our articles in the index on the right about OBRA Special Needs Pooled Trusts to read how these trusts are used to deplete the estates of the wards with attorneys' fees and guardians' fees while the wards are placed into FOR-Profit Medicaid nursing homes.
Something does not seem right here.
The link below describes the new law. Excerpts from this artcle appear below the link.
http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2012-01-24/health/ct-met-nursing-home-tax-20120124_1_nursing-homes-kirk-riva-life-services-network
U.S. OKs increase in nursing home tax to bring in more Medicaid money
New funds aimed at undoing legacy of violence in Illinois nursing homes
January 24, 2012
By David Jackson and Gary Marx, Chicago Tribune reporters
Federal authorities have approved a nursing home bed tax that will allow Illinois to collect more than $100 million a year in new Medicaid money that officials say will be used to boost facility staffing levels and implement other safety reforms mandated by a landmark 2010 overhaul, the Tribune has learned.
Gov. Pat Quinn, who is expected to announce the federal approval Tuesday, pushed hard for the tax as a way to hire more state inspectors and finance other reforms in Illinois' troubled long-term care system without dipping into the state's already-depleted coffers.
Still, the AARP and some leading advocates for the elderly and disabled raised concerns about the measure, arguing that it will provide a windfall for substandard, profit-making facilities while not doing enough to move thousands of younger mentally ill adults out of nursing homes and into community settings where they could get better care.
Because much of the bed tax will be returned to the nursing homes via the Medicaid program, which funds health care for the poor, facilities with fewer indigent patients will recoup less money. Illinois' nonprofit nursing homes, which generally serve small numbers of Medicaid clients, argue that the tax will penalize them unfairly.
"It is a bad plan for good homes and a good plan for bad homes," said Kirk Riva, vice president of public policy at the Life Services Network, the association of nonprofit facilities. "We think it's offensive."
In July 2010, Quinn signed a sweeping nursing home safety reform law after a Tribune investigation found many poorly staffed facilities were housing dangerous psychiatric patients alongside geriatric and disabled people, sometimes with deadly consequences.
With the new federal approval, Illinois will increase the bed tax by $6.07 per resident per day, bringing in an estimated $145 million a year in new revenue. Government health care funding rules allow Illinois to match the portion spent on Medicaid services to generate an estimated $110 million and also to capture additional funds.
According to state officials, approximately 86 percent of the total will be given to the facilities to pay for additional staff. Nursing home operators for years have complained that Illinois provides among the lowest reimbursement rates in the country for government-funded patients.
State authorities would use at least $20 million of the bed tax funds to hire the additional inspectors. Another portion of the funds will go toward increased home-based and community care. Spending on both of those measures could bring in additional matching dollars from the federal government.
Vinkler said the AARP had hoped to see less money flowing back to the nursing homes and more going to the state. The group had wanted stronger assurances that nursing home operators will spend the additional funds on measures that improve safety and the quality of care, he added.
Terry Sullivan, regulatory director of the Health Care Council of Illinois, the state's largest nursing home trade association, called the new tax "a tremendous and necessary support" to homes that serve indigent patients.
Those facilities on average lose $27 per patient each day because Illinois' low Medicaid reimbursement rate does not match the cost of care, Sullivan said.
dyjackson@tribune.com
gmarx@tribune.com
KawamotoDragon.com
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