Murray and DeLauro Press Trump Administration On Nursing Home Oversight As Millions of Dollars Provided by Congress Remain Unspent

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Murray and DeLauro Press Trump Administration On Nursing Home Oversight As Millions of Dollars Provided by Congress Remain Unspent

The following press release was published by the Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions on June 18, 2020. It is reproduced in full below.

The Honorable Alex Azar

Secretary

U.S. Department of Health and Human Services

200 Independence Avenue, SW

Washington, DC 20201

Dear Secretary Azar,

We write to express our concern about the Administration’s efforts to prevent and respond to the disproportionate impact of the 2019 novel coronavirus (COVID-19) on our nation’s nursing home residents and staff. As evidence has mounted since at least early April that the approximately 15,500 nursing homes nationwide are especially vulnerable to the virus, the Department, through its Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), has been slow to provide clear guidance, oversight and resources to state agencies on the frontlines. Families across the country are depending on you to take swift action to protect their loved ones at nursing homes that have been hit especially by COVID-19. Now is the time for swift action to save lives, not a slow, burdensome, business-as-usual approach.

The Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act (CARES Act) provided CMS an additional $200 million to prevent, prepare for, and respond to coronavirus, with the requirement that at least $100 million of the total be used to support increased state and federal oversight of nursing homes. Congress expected CMS would use these funds to ensure nursing homes are adhering to standards for quality of care, infection control, and maintaining sufficient staffing to minimize the spread of the virus and protect patients and staff. Yet with nursing homes at the epicenter of the pandemic, as of the beginning of June, only $1.5 million of these funds had been provided to a handful of state oversight agencies. We are concerned that very little of this funding has gone out to states since CMS opted, after waiting more than a month, to require states to apply for the funding. Given the emergency, we do not understand why CMS opted for a slow, burdensome process - or why it took so long to decide on this business-as-usual approach - when it could have quickly released funding to states and territories in need by using an expedited process.

The Kaiser Family Foundation recently estimated that nursing homes account for 41 percent of U.S. deaths from COVID-19, while data from other developed countries suggests that the nation could see 50 percent or more of all deaths from nursing home patients. Despite the known vulnerability of nursing home residents and staff, CMS waited until April 19 to require that nursing homes report COVID-19 cases of patients and staff to the CDC and that families are notified. Even with the heavy death toll, CMS has only opted to make approximately $80 million of the $200 million provided in the CARES Act available to states. While the CARES Act provided CMS with this flexibility, we do not understand why agency leadership did not respond more aggressively to the emergency by increasing the amount of funding to strengthen and expand state oversight. As we see an increase in cases in many states and prepare for a possible second wave of the virus in the fall, CMS needs to be far more proactive in efforts to protect the highly vulnerable patients in our nursing homes.

As we continue considering what steps Congress can take to address the consequences of the COVID-19, we request information from the Department on the decisions CMS has made to date. Please provide responses to the questions below by July 2, 2020:

Sincerely,

Source: Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions

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