Tuesday, December 2, 2008

Budget Cuts May Endanger California Ombudsman Program

California Nursing Home Ombudsman Program
California’s long-term care ombudsman program investigates and settles complaints regarding elder care abuse in nursing homes and other long-term care facilities. Thirty-five county and nonprofit agencies throughout the state carry out the ombudsman work. State-certified volunteers do much of the work by visiting nursing homes and attempting to resolve the thousands of complaints.

The California ombudsman program began in 1978 with a federal law that requires each state to have such a program. The ombudsman program is especially necessary, considering that nursing home and elder care abuse is on the rise and the fact that as many as 60 percent of elderly in nursing homes and other long-term care facilities have no family or friends to visit them and make sure they are being treated well. The program is so widely-used that between July 1, 2007 and June 30, 2008, the Riverside County office alone received almost 2,400 complaints about suspected nursing home abuse or neglect.

2008-2009 California Budget Cut Impacts Ombudsman Program
When the 2008-2009 California budget was signed on September 23, 2008, many people in the elder care industry were shocked to see that $3.8 million – or about half its annual budget – was cut from the ombudsman program. This will ensure that at least one of the offices will close and will put many, if not most, others in grave danger of closure or severely stress the resources of the remaining offices. Even the California Association of Health Facilities, the professional organization for nursing home and residential care facilities owners, was surprised by this budget cut.

Only days before this cut was passed, a September 18, 2008 report by the Inspector General of the Department of Health and Human Services singled out California as being one of the worst nursing home offenders in the country. No less than 99 percent of California’s nursing homes were found to be violating federal standards in some way.

Moreover, the cut only affects the ombudsman program, whose sole purpose is to assist nursing home and long-term care patients and their families where there have been incidents of neglect or abuse. Other nursing home funding, such as that through the Medi-Cal program, actually increased under this budget cut. However, funding from Medi-Cal is not required to be spent on staffing or patient care and is therefore unlikely to go toward ensuring patients are treated properly.

Possible Effects of the Budget Cut on Nursing Home Residents
In addition to the potential closing of at least one, and possibly more, of the regional ombudsman program offices, the greatest concern is what will happen to already vulnerable nursing home patients around the state. California Advocates for Nursing Home Reform (CANHR) , the statewide advocacy group for nursing home patients, believes this budget cut could result in an increase in the number of unreported and unresolved nursing home incidents.

Governor Schwarzenegger’s office believes that California’s Department of Public Health inspectors, who are in charge of monitoring and inspecting nursing homes, will sufficiently attend to patients’ needs. However, considering the amount of complaints the ombudsman offices currently receive, and the fact that the budget cut has already forced many offices to cut their staff significantly, it remains to be seen whether the state inspectors will be able to adequately address the needs of nursing home patients.

Thanks for reading my blog. If you have a comment or question, please feel free to reply to this posting, or send me an e-mail. If you suspect that a loved one has been the victim of elder abuse, contact me to schedule a confidential consultation and for immediate assistance.

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