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For Some,
Nursing Homes Are a Prison
By Matt Sedensky
AOL Health News
September 20, 2008
PLANT CITY, Fla. (Sept. 20)
- Charles Todd Lee spent a lifetime going backstage at concerts,
following politicians on the campaign trail and capturing iconic
shots of everyone from Martin Luther King Jr. to Mick Jagger to
Mickey Mantle. Today, he enjoys such freedom only in his dreams.
The 67-year-old
photographer has been confined to a nursing home for five years, the
victim of a stroke that paralyzed his left side. And he's angry.
"Most of the people come
here to die, so you want to die," he said. "It is a prison. I can't
escape it."
Lee is among the Medicaid
recipients across Florida challenging the nightmare of the old and
disabled: to be forced from comfort and familiarity into a nursing
home.
They say the state is
illegally forcing them to live in nursing homes when they should be
able to live where they choose. Advocates charge that nursing homes,
afraid of losing money, have successfully pressured politicians to
make qualifying for community care more difficult. They have filed a
federal lawsuit seeking class-action status on behalf of nearly
8,500 institutionalized Floridians.
Whether the litigation gets
Lee and others moved out of nursing homes remains to be seen. But at
the very least, it has illuminated the frustration experienced by
older people or those with disabilities who say they're shuttled
into nursing homes when they are healthy enough to live at home,
with relatives, or in other less institutional settings.
"There are very, very, very
few people who cannot be cared for outside in the community," said
Stephen Gold, a Philadelphia disability lawyer who, along with AARP
attorneys and others, is representing the group. "Why should the
state give a damn whether you put the money in the left pocket of
the nursing home or the right pocket of the community?"
Americans who qualify for
Medicaid and get sick or disabled enough to require substantial care
typically have little problem gaining admission to a nursing home.
But obtaining Medicaid-supported services at home, such as visits
from an aide, is substantially harder and often involves a long
waiting list, even though it may cost the government less.
Advocates for the elderly
and disabled had hoped a 1999 Supreme Court case would change that.
The Olmstead decision, as it is known, involved two Georgia women,
both Medicaid beneficiaries with mental retardation who wanted
community-based services, but were refused and were treated in
institutions.
The high court ruled
unjustified isolation of the disabled in institutions amounted to
discrimination under the Americans with Disabilities Act. It said
states must provide community services if patients want them, if
they can be accommodated and if it's appropriate. Medicaid is the
state-federal partnership that provides health coverage and nursing
home care to the poor.
"There's a lot of concern
that the nursing home industry is very powerful in many states and
has made sure that a lot of Medicaid dollars go to institutional
care as opposed to home and community-based care," said Toby
Edelman, an attorney at the Center for Medicare Advocacy.
States have been putting
more money into community services, but not nearly enough to meet
the demand of people who would rather stay at home than go to a
facility. Nationally, state Medicaid payments for long-term
community care have skyrocketed since the Olmstead decision, from
$17.4 billion in 1999 to $42.8 billion last year, though spending on
nursing homes and other institutions is still substantially higher.
A total of $59.5 billion
was spent last year on institutional care through Medicaid.
The Florida Agency for
Health Care Administration, the Florida Department of Elder Affairs
and Gov. Charlie Crist's office — the three defendants — all
declined to comment on the litigation. So did the attorney general's
office, which is representing the defendants.
In court filings, the
defendants have claimed the plaintiffs lack standing because they
haven't proven that treatment professionals deemed community-based
care appropriate for each patient.
"Plaintiffs are not
alleging that Florida's Medicaid program has failed to cover their
medically necessary services," the defendants wrote. "Instead,
plaintiffs want this court to second-guess the manner by which
Florida's elected officials and policymakers have chosen to make
those services available in light of the state's available
resources."
The American Association of
Homes and Services for the Aging represents about 5,700
not-for-profit organizations from nursing homes to adult day care to
in-home aides. A spokeswoman, Lauren Shaham, said there is "an
institutional bias" in the Medicaid program that limits home and
community care, but also noted nursing homes are needed for some of
society's frailest or most disabled.
The American Health Care
Association, which represents about 11,000 nursing homes and
long-term care facilities, a majority of them for-profit, also said
such institutions were often most appropriate for round-the-clock
care. Spokeswoman Susan Feeney noted, "You don't want to be there
but sometimes for health reasons beyond your control, you have to
be."
John Boyd, 50, has been in
a nursing home for the last nine years. He hates them. He became a
quadriplegic 36 years ago when he fell off a wall and broke his
neck.
"I can't choose what meal I
want, I can't have a visitor after 8 o'clock — it's just like a
prison without bars," he said. "People are making decisions for and
about me that don't even know me or even care about me. All they
care about is the money they're getting for me."
Copyright 2008 The
Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report
may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed
without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. Active
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