CARMICHAEL, Calif. — The lobby of Rosewood Post-Acute Rehab, a nursing home in this Sacramento suburb, bears all the touches of a luxury hotel, including high ceilings, leather club chairs and paintings of bucolic landscapes. What really sets Rosewood apart, however, is its five-star rating from Medicare, which has been assigning hotel-style ratings to nearly every nursing home in the country for the last five years. Rosewood’s five-star status — the best possible — places it in rarefied company: Only one-fifth of more than 15,000 nursing homes nationwide hold such a distinction. But an examination of the rating system by The New York Times has found that Rosewood and many other top-ranked nursing homes have been given a seal of approval that is based on incomplete information and that can seriously mislead consumers, investors and others about conditions at the homes. The Medicare ratings, which have become the gold standard across the industry, are based in large part on self-reported data by the nursing homes that the government does not verify. Only one of the three criteria used to determine the star ratings — the results of annual health inspections — relies on assessments from independent reviewers. The other measures — staff levels and quality statistics — are reported by the nursing homes and accepted by Medicare, with limited exceptions, at face value. The ratings also do not take into account entire sets of... |
Copyright
(c) 2010-2025 Jon L Gelman, All Rights Reserved.
Showing posts with label Sacramento California. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sacramento California. Show all posts
Monday, August 25, 2014
Medicare Star Ratings Allow Nursing Homes to Game the System
Sunday, July 20, 2014
CCWC at Disneyland
Today's post is authored by Julius Young and shared from workcompzone.com I’ve been attending the 2014 California Coalition on Workers’ Compensation annual conference at Disneyland, which wrapped up yesterday. On Wednesday the conference kicked off with a blogger’s panel featuring myself, insurance consultant and blogger Peter Rousmaniere, Workcompcentral.com publisher David DePaolo, and WorkersCompensation.com publisher Bob Wilson. Mark Walls of Safety National Insurance moderated a lively discussion that got into some “out of the box” discussions about the direction of workers’ comp; in a coming post I’ll reprise some of the thoughts from the panel and offer some further insights. CCWC is a major player on the California workers’ comp scene. Many of California’s big employers are members. I’m talking companies like Safeway, Walt Disney and UPS. CCWC is one of several prominent employer advocates in Sacramento along with the Cal Chamber and groups like WCAN (Workers Compensation Action Network). Members of CCWC were pivotal in drafting and pushing through the 2012 SB 863 California comp reforms. Key board members clearly have the ear of Brown Administration policymakers. And the Sacramento lobbyists used by CCWC, Paul Yoder and Jason Schmelzer, are a talented bunch. In short, the conference attracts many of the key employer and insurer players in California workers’ comp. Here are some of the more interesting things I heard and some of my random impressions from the... |
Related articles
- It's A Priviledge (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Legal Fees and Reform (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Work Comp Lost Focus (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Top 10 Events in California Workers' Comp 1st Half 2014 (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- AIG Exits Workers Compensation As Comp Medical Issues Grow (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- California limits workers' comp sports injury claims (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
Monday, November 11, 2013
Worried About Costs And Unaware of Help, Californians Head Into New Era of Health Coverage
Today's post was shared by Kaiser Health News and comes from www.kaiserhealthnews.org
As uninsured Californians head into a new era of health coverage, they're worried about costs and unaware of the help they'll get from the government, a new survey finds.
The survey, by the Kaiser Family Foundation, found that three out of four Californians who earn modest incomes and could buy government-subsidized private coverage believe, wrongly, that they're not eligible for federal assistance or they simply don't know if they qualify. "This has been, for so long, a political debate," said Anthony Wright, executive director of Health Access, a Sacramento-based consumer advocacy group. "We're just starting to move it into a practical reality. Now that the benefits are close at hand, there is a concerted effort to educate people about what their benefits are." California is one of two dozen states preparing to dramatically expand Medicaid, the federal-state insurance program for the poor, yet the survey found only half of newly eligible low-income Californians presume they will qualify. The nonpartisan Kaiser Family Foundation surveyed some 2,000 uninsured Californians from mid-July until the end of August, a summertime lull before a burst of... |
Related articles
- California: Medical Delay and Denial Protested (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- For Many Workers, It's Time To Consider Insurance Options (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Costliest 1 Percent Of Patients Account For 21 Percent Of U.S. Health Spending (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Prevention For Profit: Questions Raised About Some Health Screenings (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)