by James C. Sherlock

One of the most important and heart-wrenching decisions families make for their elderly loved ones is whether they are able to keep them in their homes as they get older and sicker.

Sometimes that is not feasible for a long list of reasons in each case.

More than 30,000 Virginians live in nursing homes.

Both the federal government and Virginia regulate them.  The Virginia Department of Health, for both the Commonwealth and the federal government, inspects.

We should be able to expect patients to receive at least basic standards of care. A high percentage in Virginia have not .

In a five-star system, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) rates 98 of Virginia’s 289 nursing homes at one star – defined as much below average. More than a third.

Nationwide, only the worst 20 percent receive a one-star rating.

The last time I reported, in October of 2021, those figures were 54 one-star facilities out of 288. Nineteen percent.  So some of our nursing homes have gotten precipitously worse.

The ratings are backward-looking a couple of years, so the measured declines discussed here did not start recently.   By definition of the way that Medicare compiles records and assigns scores, some have been bad for a long time.

People have suffered and died from the lack of proper care and effective oversight.

Ownership of many nursing facilities, especially the worst ones, has become a shell game subject to high-frequency shifts of ownership and changing facility names.

The game exceeds the demonstrated ability of governments to track those changes for purposes of public information. That game has to at least complicate regulation if not thwart it.

But for whatever reason, nursing home regulation has failed utterly in Virginia. It is past time to fix it.

CMS Ratings. Any new search by families for nursing homes should start with the CMS star ratings, as does this article.

CMS rates those facilities which accept government insurance, which is nearly all of them, and the common rating source makes them comparable.

The overall “star” ratings (1 thru 5) are compiled from a combination of individual star ratings for health inspection reports, staffing data, and health care quality measures.

The CMS rating system is outstanding.  There is no other worth consulting.

Licensing. Virginia’s Department of Health licenses nursing homes. It has the authority to sanction consistently bad facilities and bad operators.

Financial data. The Commonwealth provides different data that are equally important to a thorough search by families — and by the General Assembly.

The Virginia Department of Health (VDH) contractor for medical data management is vhi.org. It provides, among other unique services, information on the financial performance of medical facilities in the state.

A nursing home that routinely loses money, assuming the financial reporting is accurate, which is a known problem in facilities owned by some private equity firms, is a risk regardless of the latest CMS star ratings.

But, for whatever reason, the financial data published by vhi.org are preposterously out of date. The data posted on February 28 of this year are from fiscal year 2021. They are better than nothing.

Facility name and ownership problems. A search of federal and state nursing home records available to the public shows a significant pattern of discrepancies of facility names and ownerships among:

  • vhi.org for the state;
  • CMS Medicare Compare data for the federal government; and
  • the current actual ownership and names of facilities.

My research shows a large majority of Virginia nursing homes caught up in that specific form of chaos have changed names, ownership or both in the past couple of years.

CMS and vhi.org don’t even agree on how many nursing homes there are in Virginia. They clearly use different criteria. We just don’t know what the differences are.

To pick but two examples, The Glebe in Daleville and The Culpeper in that town offer skilled nursing, rehabilitation and memory care. The Glebe has an overall 5 Star rating from CMS. The Culpeper three stars. But the vhi.org list of nursing homes does not recognize a nursing home at either address.

That is because vhi.org designates those facilities as long-term care facilities. Interesting, but not helpful to those turning to its nursing home page.

Families should note that in cases in which vhi.org and CMS have different naming and/or ownership data for nursing homes at the same location, the investigation shows that the CMS data are inevitably more recent.

Take the nursing facility at 600 Walden Road in Abingdon.

  • Vhi.org shows it to be named Abingdon VA Opco LLC owned by the Portopiccolo Group;
  • CMS shows it to be Choice Healthcare at Abingdon owned by 600 Walden Opco LLC; and
  • Today it is Deer Meadows Rehabilitation and Nursing, owned by Eastern Healthcare Group of Montvale New Jersey. That name is not reflected in the public records of either the federal or state governments.

Rapid assembly of large Virginia chains. Eastern Healthcare Group

suddenly owns 14 nursing homes in Virginia, primarily from buying out Portopiccolo Group’s Virginia facilities.

Flushing, New York’s Hill Valley Healthcare, equally suddenly, owns 18 nursing homes in Virginia, closing the purchases on most of them in January.

Eastern and Hill Valley each recently bought portfolios containing some of the worst nursing homes in the state as rated by CMS. That can be a good thing if each has the resources and the will to invest in upgrading staffing and facilities.

But we don’t know if that is what will happen. Nor, it appears, does the government of Virginia.

Eastern and Hill Valley indeed may represent upgrades from the owners they replaced. The good news, if it can be couched as such, is that in the case of most of the nursing homes in those two portfolios, it would seem difficult to make them worse.

So, Godspeed to the new owners.

Question for government. We must question whether the government agencies themselves know who owns the facilities in a timely manner.

  • How soon are they notified after a sale?
  • Is the state notified before a sale? If so, does the state have any authority to vet new buyers?
  • What happens when a new owner takes over a one-star rated facility? How does that affect regulation activities?

We ask those questions because there are ownership groups, some of whom have  operated in Virginia, notorious for:

  • buying nursing homes;
  • stripping staff to far below CMS-required levels regardless of the effects on Medicare Compare star ratings;
  • pocketing the profits; and
  • within a couple of years reselling facilities at a higher price based on the higher cash flows.

That has been done widely in the Commonwealth.

Bottom line. Government agencies which we count on for both nursing home information and regulation appear unable to reliably provide either.

VDH inspects nursing homes for CMS, for Pete’s sake, so we at least should be able to count on them having the same information and that information being up to date when offered to the public and the General Assembly.

Doesn’t seem too much to ask. But it has proven to be.

More importantly, the worst nursing home operators appear to stay ahead of the consequences of the violations of government policy by flipping their properties and moving on.

Sick elderly people and their families are unaware of anything other than that their care has become dystopian in the switches.

Recommendations. If current laws have been broken, Commonwealth’s Attorneys should prosecute. If regulations have been broken, sanction the owners who broke them.

Regardless, a thorough review and report by the Department of Health and the Department of Medical Assistance Services (DMAS) of their nursing home regulatory, oversight and public information programs is necessary prior to the next General Assembly session to determine how to improve them.

Virginia needs mechanisms to:

  • track and report nursing home ownership and facility names in near-real time;
  • stop Medicaid reimbursement of nursing homes in violation of health regulations; and
  • block Virginia acquisitions by ownerships with bad track records or insufficient assets.

The VDH already has the authority to remove the licenses from operators who disregard regulations as a business model.

If legislation or regulation changes are necessary, propose them.  In a later article, I will offer regulatory changes that do not require new laws.

In the meantime, Virginia’s elected constitutional officers and General Assembly members may wish to examine campaign donations and stop taking/refund money from Virginia’s worst nursing home operators.

This is the first in a series on this issue.


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Comments

28 responses to “Scandal in Plain Sight – Virginia’s Failed Regulation of Law-Avoiding Nursing Home Owners”

  1. Dick Hall-Sizemore Avatar
    Dick Hall-Sizemore

    It appears that Republicans in the Va. House of Delegates are not interested in regulating nursing homes. In the 2022 Session, Del. Watts (D-Fairfax) introduced HB 330, which would have required nursing homes to meet baseline staffing levels in alignment in with CMS staffing level recommendations. Del. Carr (D-Richmond) introduced HB 646 that would have required the State Board of Health to establish staffing and care standards for nursing homes. Both bills were carried over in the House Health, Welfare, and Institutions Committee and left to die in the committee.

    In the 2023 session, Watts tried again, this time with HB 1564. Although that bill was less ambitious than her bill in 2022, it, too, died in HWI.

    To get some meaningful regulation of nursing homes established in Virginia, it looks like you need to talk to your Republican colleagues.

    1. how_it_works Avatar
      how_it_works

      The partisan finger-pointing gets tiresome.

      1. Dick Hall-Sizemore Avatar
        Dick Hall-Sizemore

        It is interesting that this objection is not raised when it is Democrats that are being criticized.

        1. James C. Sherlock Avatar
          James C. Sherlock

          Dick, you are the one who brought it up.

        2. how_it_works Avatar
          how_it_works

          Both sides do it.

          About the only time partisan finger-pointing doesn’t happen is when they “reach across the aisle” to figure out how to screw the average citizen.

    2. James C. Sherlock Avatar
      James C. Sherlock

      I have been a leading public voice on this subject for years, Dick. I will continue to do so until it gets better.

      VDH was led by Democrats when those records were compiled. Licenses could have been pulled. I purposely avoided writing that.

      What source told you that all of the Democrats were prepared to vote for that bill. They had free rein in 2020 and 2021 and it apparently never surfaced.

      But thanks for the note.

  2. LesGabriel Avatar
    LesGabriel

    You state that Virginia licenses nursing homes but did not explicitly state which agency (VDH/vhi) is responsible for issuing and maintaining licenses. I would assume that, but perhaps I am wrong, that when a license is issued the agency has up-to-date information on the location and the owner of the facility and that any transfer of ownership would require a new license or at least a modification of an existing one. In either case, it seems that the State should have real-time information available that could be made public on-line. Also, if the license is based on certain performance data, then failure to maintain those performance standards should lead to the loss of license. Otherwise, what is the point of having a licensing program? How many facilities have lost their licenses in recent years? Are there similar problems with other elder-care facilities, such as assisted-living facilities? Are they also licensed and rated?

    1. James C. Sherlock Avatar
      James C. Sherlock

      VDH. Vhi is their data contractor.

      I am unaware of any facility that has lost its license for misfeasance.

  3. how_it_works Avatar
    how_it_works

    Worst mistake my parents ever made was growing old in Virginia.

    Second worst mistake they ever made was moving to Virginia.

    I dread the day when my mother needs nursing home care.

    1. James Wyatt Whitehead Avatar
      James Wyatt Whitehead

      Keep Blue Ridge Homes in Bealeton in mind. Unbelievable place. Private, Christian, and a staff that is golden. There is a waiting list.

      1. how_it_works Avatar
        how_it_works

        I’ll keep that one in mind.

    2. James C. Sherlock Avatar
      James C. Sherlock

      Please take my advice and consult https://www.medicare.gov/care-compare/results?searchType=NursingHome&page=15&state=VA&sort=alpha

      That gives the results for every nursing home in Virginia. Insert your search terms and find a five star nursing home.

  4. Eric the half a troll Avatar
    Eric the half a troll

    “Vhi.org shows it to be named Abingdon VA Opco LLC owned by the Portopiccolo Group;
    CMS shows it to be Choice Healthcare at Abingdon owned by 600 Walden Opco LLC;”

    As soon as you see it’s an LLC, you know there’s something fishy going on…

    1. James C. Sherlock Avatar
      James C. Sherlock

      Why, exactly, is that? It means that a group of people invested their money together.

      1. Eric the half a troll Avatar
        Eric the half a troll

        LLCs are commonly used to hide the ownership of the corporation. A group of people could just as easily create an S corporation. They chose LLC for a reason.

        1. Nancy Naive Avatar
          Nancy Naive

          Liability. It’s in the name.

          1. Eric the half a troll Avatar
            Eric the half a troll

            There is really no more protection in an LLC than there is in a S corp.

  5. vicnicholls Avatar
    vicnicholls

    Capt, have you looked into Senator Louise “you can make $$$ off of nursing homes” Lucas and her homes?

    1. James C. Sherlock Avatar
      James C. Sherlock

      No, I have not.

      I want VDH to take a way more aggressive posture to oversight and licensing, and let the chips fall where they may.

  6. Nancy Naive Avatar
    Nancy Naive

    A fiery car crash is looking better and better. Or, Oregon.

  7. Dick Hall-Sizemore Avatar
    Dick Hall-Sizemore

    I agree with your points about the need for transparency in ownership. As for cracking down on nursing homes “in violation of health regulations” that is difficult to do because the regulations are so broad and vague. For example, for nurse staffing, the regulation says, “The nursing facility shall provide qualified nurses and certified nurse aides on all shifts, seven days per week, in sufficient number to meet the assessed nursing care needs of all residents.” Requiring a DOH inspector to determine what is a “sufficient” number is placing an unfair burden on that official. The regulations need to be tightened up so as to set specific staffing standards, similar to CMS recommendations. Perhaps the new board under the current administration will tackle this issue.

    1. Lefty665 Avatar
      Lefty665

      “Requiring a DOH inspector to determine what is a “sufficient” number is placing an unfair burden on that official.”

      That also gives the official the latitude to decide what is “sufficient”. Twas ever thus with inspectors of any type. They all decide what is up to snuff and what is not. Inspectees learn very quickly what standards they need to meet to stay on the good side of the inspector.

  8. Dick Hall-Sizemore Avatar
    Dick Hall-Sizemore

    I agree with your points about the need for transparency in ownership. As for cracking down on nursing homes “in violation of health regulations” that is difficult to do because the regulations are so broad and vague. For example, for nurse staffing, the regulation says, “The nursing facility shall provide qualified nurses and certified nurse aides on all shifts, seven days per week, in sufficient number to meet the assessed nursing care needs of all residents.” Requiring a DOH inspector to determine what is a “sufficient” number is placing an unfair burden on that official. The regulations need to be tightened up so as to set specific staffing standards, similar to CMS recommendations. Perhaps the new board under the current administration will tackle this issue.

  9. Dick Hall-Sizemore Avatar
    Dick Hall-Sizemore

    I agree with your points about the need for transparency in ownership. As for cracking down on nursing homes “in violation of health regulations” that is difficult to do because the regulations are so broad and vague. For example, for nurse staffing, the regulation says, “The nursing facility shall provide qualified nurses and certified nurse aides on all shifts, seven days per week, in sufficient number to meet the assessed nursing care needs of all residents.” Requiring a DOH inspector to determine what is a “sufficient” number is placing an unfair burden on that official. The regulations need to be tightened up so as to set specific staffing standards, similar to CMS recommendations. Perhaps the new board under the current administration will tackle this issue.

    1. James C. Sherlock Avatar
      James C. Sherlock

      This information is already planned for future columns on this subject, but I will address it here as well.

      CMS, with all of the patient-level information on all of the patients in a skilled nursing facility (Medicare) and in a long term nursing facility (Medicaid), calculates nursing requirements in virtually real time and compares them against payroll data to determine whether the actual staffing is sufficient.

      It is a very sophisticated process.

      VDH is the nursing home regulator and issues licenses. https://vdh.virginia.gov/content/uploads/sites/3/2016/03/VDH_OfficeOfLicensureCertification_FAQ.pdf#:~:text=Virginia%20state%20law%20requires%20that%20all%20nursing%20facilities,that%20may%20seriously%20jeopardize%20patient%20health%20and%20safety. VDH Office of Licensure and Inspections not only issues licenses, but also is the nursing home inspection agent for CMS.

      Virginia law https://law.lis.virginia.gov/vacode/title32.1/chapter5/section32.1-127/ already directs the issuance of regulations to nursing homes et. al. for minimum standards for “the operation, staffing and equipping of hospitals, nursing homes and certified nursing facilities;”.

      12VAC5-371-90. Administrative sanctions https://law.lis.virginia.gov/admincode/title12/agency5/chapter371/section90/
      “A. Nothing in this part shall prohibit the department from exercising its responsibility and authority to enforce the regulation, including proceeding directly to imposition of administrative sanctions, when the quality of care or the quality of life has been severely compromised.
      B. The commissioner may impose such administrative sanctions or take such actions as are appropriate for violation of any of the standards or statutes or for abuse or neglect of persons in care. Such sanctions include:

      1. Restricting or prohibiting new admissions to any nursing facility;
      2. Petitioning the court to impose a civil penalty or to appoint a receiver, or both; or
      3. Revoking or suspending the license of a nursing facility.”

      I contend that is sufficient authority to regulate nursing homes far more effectively that is currently done.

      So we agree about tightening staffing regulations.

      But no new law or regulation is required for the VDH Commissioner to sanctions including pulling the license of a facility or operator for neglect of patients based on the CMS actual vs. required staffing calculations.

      The Commissioner need only determine that the pattern of inadequate staffing severely compromises patient quality of care or the quality of life.

  10. Elliot K Avatar
    Elliot K

    Thank you for this article. It is surprising that facilities and ownership data is delayed.
    I have to add that I had visited some of the Eastern Healthcare facilities in Virginia, Blue Ridge in Harrisonburg. The staff and leadership are amazing and the care is great. I even met one of the owners and they are very professional and easy to talk to.

  11. Thomas Dixon Avatar
    Thomas Dixon

    After seeing what the Virginia Department of Health did to institutions during the Covid fiasco, I would not trust them to regulate anything.

  12. Nancy Naive Avatar
    Nancy Naive

    Apparently, some old men didn’t plant trees as young men, and now no one has shade.

    Wow, gapping holes in America’s social safety nets. Who’da thunk it?

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