CMS Gives More Details On Its Mandate For Covid Vaccines At Nursing Homes
Modern Healthcare reports that nursing homes will first be notified that they are not in compliance. After that, they will be fined, denied payment and ultimately removed from Medicaid/Medicare if they do not comply.
Modern Healthcare:
CMS Will Not Immediately Remove Nursing Homes From Medicare And Medicaid Over Vaccine Requirement
CMS will not immediately remove nursing homes from Medicaid and Medicare if they do not adhere to the employee staff vaccination requirement announced last week, administrators said during a call with industry stakeholders on Wednesday. Instead, CMS will take a stepwise approach to enforcing the mandate. Nursing homes will first be notified they are not in compliance with the regulation, then assessed civil monetary penalties, then denied payment, and ultimately removed from the program if they do not comply. (Christ, 8/25)
In related news about nurses and nursing homes —
CBS News:
Nebraska Job Ad For Nurses Touts Lack Of Vaccination Requirement
Nebraska's veterans affairs agency is facing questions from a state lawmaker after it published job advertisements for nurses touting the fact that the state doesn't require its employees to get coronavirus vaccinations. The ads on a state jobs website prominently note the lack of vaccination requirements for state employees, right after mentioning a $5,000 hiring bonus. In a separate mail advertisement, the state lists "No mandated COVID-19 vaccination" as one of the "many great benefits" of its nursing jobs. (8/25)
The Wall Street Journal:
Nursing Homes Keep Losing Workers
Nursing homes have a long-term care problem: 18 months after the Covid-19 crisis began, their staffs are still shrinking. While employment in nearly every occupation has been recovering from the shock of the pandemic, the number of people working in nursing homes and other long-term-care facilities has continued to drop, according to federal data. (Weber, 8/25)
And in updates about New York's nursing homes —
Politico:
Hochul Adds 12,000 Deaths To Covid Tally, Departing From Cuomo Methods
Gov. Kathy Hochul, in one of her first acts as the new leader of New York, overhauled how the state releases Covid-19 death data to ensure that it is more consistent with federal reporting standards — an issue that dogged former Gov. Andrew Cuomo administration and sparked allegations of a coverup. The Hochul administration’s first Covid-19 update released Tuesday recognized an additional 12,000 Covid deaths that had been previously excluded from the state’s official tally. It showed both the deaths that health care facilities report through the state’s Health Electronic Response Data System — a total of 43,415 — as well as those reported to and compiled by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention — a total of 55,395. (Young, 8/25)
Fox News:
New Yorkers Disappointed In Hochul's Answer On Investigating Nursing Home Tragedy: 'Not Good Enough'
New Yorkers, many of whom were still grieving, were not thrilled with Gov. Kathy Hochul's, D., answer Wednesday regarding how she plans to investigate last year's COVID-19 nursing home tragedy and the Cuomo administration's reported cover-up. Former Gov. Andrew Cuomo, D., was condemned for enforcing a mandate that forced COVID patients into nursing homes last year, which critics alleged led to the staggering death toll in those facilities, and reports later revealed his administration blocked the release of the true death toll. Hochul was asked what she would do to get to the bottom of the sweeping tragedy. (O'Brien, 8/25)
The Washington Post:
No, There Weren’t Thousands Of Covid Deaths In New York That No One Reported
During a Wednesday interview on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe,” New York Gov. Kathy Hochul (D) — at that point on the job for less than 40 hours — announced that her state was going to provide a more accurate accounting of fatalities related to covid-19 moving forward. “We’re now releasing more data than had been released before publicly, so people know the nursing home deaths and the hospital deaths are consistent with what’s being displayed by the [Centers for Disease Control and Prevention],” Hochul said. “There’s a lot of things that weren’t happening, and I’m going to make them happen. Transparency will be the hallmark of my administration.” (Bump, 8/25)