Legislation intended
to address the nursing shortage and nursing home staffing was proposed
in the first session of the 107th Congress, but nurses and consumers
shouldn't get their hopes up for quick relief.
With Congress now
in its second session, it is clear that the events of Sept. 11 have
reordered everyone's priorities. Nonetheless, domestic issues that dominated
the legislative schedule in the first session will eventually re-emerge.
Among them, health care workforce issues and quality of care in long-term
care facilities.
The announcement
Sept. 28 by Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson that
he intends to release $27.4 million for nursing education and loan repayment
contracts is a sign that the process already is under way.
The scale of the
terrorist attacks dramatized how critical the nursing shortage is to
national security. The thousands of casualties created in a matter of
minutes underscored the need to address the nursing shortage sooner
rather than later.
As a result, despite
pessimistic comments by some members of Congress in late September about
the chances of seeing action on any of the proposed bills dealing with
the nursing shortage in the second session, at least one such bill now
has moved from the back burner to the front.
Rep. William Tauzin,
R-La., announced Oct. 3 that HR 1436, the Nurse Reinvestment Act, sponsored
by Rep. Lois Capps, D-Calif., has been given higher priority for action
by his committee. Tauzin is the chair of the House Committee on Energy
and Commerce.
HR 1436 would establish
nursing recruitment grants, fund public service announcements to promote
careers in nursing, set up a career ladder grant program, fund grants
for health career education partnerships and establish a national nurse
service corps. It also would expand spending of Medicare and Medicaid
funds for nursing education.
In all, the bill
would allocate $348 million for nursing recruitment and education from
2002 to 2004. Tauzin has not indicated when the bill might be reported
out of committee.
During the first
session, legislation to address short staffing in long-term care facilities
was proposed in the House. Two bills in particular are worth a closer
look: one by Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., and the other by Rep. Paul
Ryan, R-Wis.
Waxman introduced
HR 2677, the Nursing Home Quality Protection Act, which would reinstate
the nursing home reimbursement method in use before the implementation
of PPS, the prospective payment system created by the Balanced Budget
Act of 1997.
The earlier reimbursement
system required nursing homes to be paid based on their costs for providing
care. That provision should win general support from the nursing home
industry because it would increase payments to skilled nursing facilities
beyond what they receive under PPS--at least according to many industry
analysts. However, other provisions of the Waxman bill may not be as
welcome.
The bill calls
for nursing homes to meet the Hartford staffing standards within two
years of enactment. The standards were developed by the John A. Hartford
Foundation Institute for Geriatric Nursing and call for staff-to-resident
ratios of 1-to-5 on day shift, 1-to-10 on afternoon shift and 1-to-15
on night shift.
Although the bill
appears to require that the Hartford standards be implemented, it also
provides for "case-mix adjustment" by HHS and for implementation
of the standards to be delayed as long as the secretary determines that
implementation is "not feasible."
The bill does not
specify how the feasibility of the standards is to be determined. This
feature means the bill may have little actual impact on nursing home
staffing practices.
The Ryan bill,
HR 1510, the Medicare and Medicaid Nursing Services Quality Improvement
Act, is even less likely to have any positive effect on staffing woes
in the nation's nursing homes.
Despite the grandiose
title, the bill has nothing to do with nurse staffing or quality improvement.
It merely creates a demonstration project in eight states to allow non-nursing
personnel to assist nursing home residents at mealtimes.
The bill prohibits
these "resident assistants" from performing any other non-nursing
tasks that might free up nursing staff to perform more resident care.
It does create more paperwork for the nursing homes and HHS, though.
The nursing home
must report data on its workforce to the state and HHS must report on
the results of the demonstration projects by no later than Dec. 1, 2004.