CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JUNE 9, 2020 OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JUNE 9, 2020 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“MONEY, RACE LINKED TO SENIOR HOME VIRUS
PROBLEMS”
The headlines make it clear. So do the
statistics on who is most likely to be infected and then killed by the novel
coronavirus: Residents of homes for seniors are most at risk, whether the
facilities are nursing homes, skilled nursing or something else. Minorities are
not far behind, especially when they live in nursing homes.
About half the 4,000-odd persons
killed by the virus in California so far lived in such facilities during their
declining months and years.
Simultaneously, the percentage of African American
and Hispanic Californians in the COVID-19 infection and death statistics
significantly exceeds their percentages of the overall populace. Of course, an
outsized portion of those groups also suffers from pre-existing conditions
including obesity, lung disease and diabetes.
There is almost certainly overlap
between death statistics at senior homes and overall numbers for minority
infections and deaths, as Gov. Gavin Newsom well knows while mulling an attempt
by the senior housing industry to gain legal immunity for all its virus-related
actions, even criminal behavior.
If there’s statistical overlap, it’s
probably because – as several studies since 2007 indicate – care is often
inferior in nursing homes catering primarily to minorities compared to ones
whose residents are mostly Caucasian. This is true in California and
nationally. Figures published in mid-May revealed that people in homes with
more than 25 percent minority residents are more than twice as likely to
contract the virus than residents of homes catering mainly to whites.
Studies comparing quality of care come from
accomplished outfits like the Center for Public Integrity (“Nursing homes
serving minorities offer less care than those serving whites”) and the State
University of New York at Stony Brook (“Nursing homes in minority neighborhoods
provide poorer quality care”).
Their findings are partly because
nursing homes serving minorities depend more on funding from Medi-Cal or
Medicaid than those mostly dealing with whites. The same studies find that the
greater a facility’s dependence on low-income public health funding programs,
the more fiscal pressure on it.
How severe is that pressure? Medi-Cal
payments for nursing home patients average about $217 per patient per day,
state figures show. That’s far below the cost of hiring an in-home caregiver
for 24-hour coverage, which patients should get in nursing homes.
This sad picture demonstrates a strong
need for a thorough state investigation of senior home treatment of minorities
– during the current crisis and before. This should be a major priority for
Newsom, whose administration has been largely passive while nursing homes in
locales as varied as Riverside and Tulare suffered clusters of coronavirus
deaths.
Meanwhile, senior homes are active in
a broad lobbying effort by the health care industry to convince Newsom he
should shield such facilities, plus doctors and hospitals of all types, from
lawsuits and prosecution, even if their conduct led to COVID-19 fatalities.
With legal immunity, plaintiffs would have to prove willful misconduct to win a
lawsuit. Even without immunity, California has a decades-old maximum of
$250,000 in pain and suffering damages for medical malpractice.
States like Illinois, New Jersey, New
York and Iowa have already granted varying levels of immunity.
But Newsom gets more pressure than most
governors from nursing home reformists and families who have lost loved ones.
Said Michael Conners, an advocate with
the watchdog group Californian Advocates for Nursing Home Reform (via email),
“Giving nursing homes license to commit elder abuse right now is a recipe for
disaster. What’s more, the scope of immunity being sought is not limited to
nursing homes that accept COVID-19 patients.”
Added Oakland civil rights lawyer John
Burris, “(Immunity) incentivizes bad conduct.”
Reformists say that rather than
granting immunity (it’s uncertain that even emergency powers give Newsom that
authority), the state should move to ensure uniformly thorough sanitation in
all senior homes, better pay to help draw higher quality caregivers and
adequate personal protection equipment for them to use.
So far, there are no signs of change
or an investigation, despite the dramatic evidence of racial and economic
differences, especially in nursing home care.
The bottom line: It’s high time state
government examines both the many senior home fatalities and their apparent
racial and economic components.
-30-
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough, The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It" is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
No comments:
Post a Comment