Genesis HealthCare, a massive publicly traded firm that runs nursing homes, will pay Vermont $740,143 to settle allegations of neglect resulting in three serious injuries and a death.
Vermont Attorney General T.J. Donovan announced the settlement, which stems from incidents at three facilities in 2018 and 2019, at a press conference Thursday afternoon. The agreement settles claims relating to the state’s vulnerable adult statutes and the False Claims Act.
“Here is the bottom line," Donovan said. "We will not tolerate substandard care in the state of Vermont for the most vulnerable of our state.”
The three facilities — St. Johnsbury Health & Rehab, Berlin Health & Rehab Center and Burlington Health & Rehab Center — rank among the lowest rated in the state, according to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ Nursing Home Compare system. The St. Johnsbury and Berlin homes both have one out of five stars, based on metrics that include three years' worth of health inspections, staffing levels and clinical outcomes for residents. The Burlington facility has two stars. The statewide average for nursing homes is 3.2 stars, while Genesis-owned homes average 2.6.
Genesis denied that it had violated state law but agreed to the settlement “to avoid the delay, expense, inconvenience and uncertainty of litigation,” according to settlement documents.
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Kevin McCallum
Attorney General T.J. Donovan speaking at a press conference Thursday
In addition to paying damages and penalties, Genesis said it would create a position for a patient care coordinator, who would be in charge of training staff at the three facilities and report progress to the state. The company also agreed to hire an independent monitor to perform an annual review of the three facilities.
Genesis is a Pennsylvania-based corporation that owned or managed 425 facilities in 29 states as of December 2018, according to its reports filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. It purchased the homes in 2016 from Revera, a Canadian company.
Genesis owns nine nursing homes in Vermont — a quarter of the state’s 36 federally regulated nursing facilities. (Two additional homes are not certified to accept Medicare and Medicaid and are regulated by the state.) Genesis facilities hold 1,019 beds, 33 percent of the state’s total nursing home capacity.
According to state projections, one in four Vermont residents will be 65 or older by 2030. As Vermont’s population ages, demand for facilities that provide medical care and help with daily living is expected to grow.
And staffing is already an issue for these facilities. Worse for Care, a joint Seven Days and Vermont Public Radio investigation published in 2019, revealed staffing issues in state-regulated eldercare facilities, which serve residents whose needs don’t meet the threshold for nursing home care. Caregivers without medical certification face long hours and can earn average hourly wages of just over $13, according to state labor data.
Staffing problems factored into multiple incidents the state flagged as part of the Genesis settlement. In two instances, short-term staffers at the Burlington and St. Johnsbury facilities gave residents who were on specialized diets the wrong food, and the residents choked. The St. Johnsbury resident required hospitalization; the Burlington resident later died.
The state also cited an incident at the Berlin Health & Rehab Center in which staffers identified two ulcers on a resident’s leg but failed to perform required wound assessments. The resident required hospitalization to treat the ulcers.
In an April incident, the Burlington Health & Rehab Center improperly discharged a resident with lower-body paralysis after failing for months to treat his emotional issues and alcohol addiction. A staffer dropped the resident off at a nearby hotel, booked a one-night stay for him and left, despite knowing that he could not get into bed, use the toilet or access food, drink or medications without help. The facility did not notify his family or the Visiting Nurse Association about the discharge until the next day.
After the man spent a single night in the hotel, staff asked police to check on his welfare. He wound up at a hospital, where staff noted he was covered in feces, had a burst catheter bag, and was suffering from fever and an acute kidney infection.
The settlement noted that the facility billed Medicaid for the man's care the day after he was dropped off.
The Vermont settlement is not the only recent one for Genesis. In 2017, Genesis agreed to pay $53.7 million to the U.S. Department of Justice to settle claims of false billing practices. Over the past three years, the company has also paid $131,687 in regulatory fines for deficiencies at its nine Vermont facilities.
The company reported $4.98 billion in revenue in 2018.
“I think this was a case that tugged at all of our heartstrings," said Linda Purdy, an assistant attorney general who worked on the case. "We all have loved ones, parents, and we have to make difficult decisions on where they are cared for in Vermont in their later years,” she said.
Vermonters researching nursing homes can look up ratings and inspection information on the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid's Nursing Home Compare tool. And to look up info on state-regulated residential care and assisted-living facilities, use the Vermont Eldercare Navigator, created by Seven Days and VPR for the Worse for Care reports.
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Vermonters entrust 133 residential care homes and assisted living facilities with providing services for more than 3,000 elderly residents. For this joint investigation, Seven Days and Vermont Public Radio reviewed five and a half years of complaints and state inspections of these homes. Some facilities weren’t clean, kept sloppy records, or fed seniors cheap, high-sodium foods, records show. Some of the most serious lapses: Seniors have been assaulted, exploited or treated in undignified ways. For this series, we created our Vermont Eldercare Navigator, which allows the public to easily review inspection reports.
by Derek Brouwer, Andrea Suozzo and Emily Corwin (VPR)
Bio:
Kevin McCallum is a political reporter at Seven Days, covering the Statehouse and state government. He previously was a reporter at The Press Democrat in Santa Rosa, Calif.
Bio:
Andrea is the data editor at Seven Days. She crunches the numbers for data-driven stories and creates graphics and interactives to explain those numbers.