Nursing Home Deficiencies by State

When nursing home incidents occur, they receive big news. Just this week, a Pinellas Park, Florida nursing care center resident died after appearing to have been left outside in the sun. The nursing home had been cited for various deficiencies and had received a one-star rating. In fact, the nursing home had 96 deficiencies cited going back to 2010 including 33 in 2015 alone based on data compiled from CMS in Public Insight.

 

State inspectors work as agents on behalf of the U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS). CMS provides guidelines as to what constitutes deficiencies and deficiencies must be documented in a consistent manner. CMS documents nursing home deficiencies quarterly as part of the public reporting process. Because nursing home inspections occur over time, it would be inconclusive to look at any particular nursing home for any individual quarter. However, over time we can gauge the magnitude of deficiencies and the rate at which they are assessed.

 

We used Public Insight OmniView (see video blog) to aggregate the number of deficiencies over the trailing five quarters (Q1 2016 and all of 2015) for 14,710 nursing homes. We then compared the number of deficiencies to the cumulative number of residents in nursing homes for the state to create a deficiency rate which we used as a benchmark indicator. This takes advantage of the regional linkages available coming soon OmniView. The map below in Tableau shows the range of deficiency rates by state.

  • The average deficiency rate (total number of deficiencies/current number of residents) was 12.5% through this five quarter period.

  • Deficiency rates range from 4.4% (Rhode Island) to 19.4% (Wyoming) in the continental US. Of the large states, California has a 17.8% deficiency rate.

 

Deficiency rates in Public Insight can go further down to severity and type. Deficiency rates alone do not indicate the quality of nursing homes in a particular state. Nor does it mean that any particular state is over-zealous or not zealous enough in its inspections. For example, high police violations do not signal a lower crime rate. However, it does reinforce the range of potential quality enforcement that does exist across the U.S. despite the best of intention.

 

As with every analysis done in our blog posts, you can conduct the same type of research using Public Insight’s Premium Tools like OmniView. A subscription to Public Insight Premium includes a 30-day, risk-free guarantee. If you don’t like the analysis features of Public Insight, contact us for a full refund. To find out more about Public Insight’s Premium Tools and how they can benefit you and your organization, click HERE

 

 

Share This Story

Similar Posts

  • Is Bureau of Labor Statistics Data Adequate?

    Several weeks ago, the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) released updated Occupational Employment Statistics (OES) survey data. BLS OES is one of those foundational programs and datasets that are used for comprehensive occupational analysis. It produces employment and wage compensation estimates annually for nearly 800 occupations. These estimates are available…

  • Is There an Oasis in the New Food Data?

    The recently released updated Food Environment Atlas data by the USDA give us a real glimpse into the progress that we as a nation are making on combating food deserts. The USDA defines food deserts as lack of access to a healthy food retail outlet (a supermarket or large grocery store)…

  • Room and Board Cost Increases Slowing

    After three straight years of 3-5% increases, room and board annual growth has finally slowed to a more pedestrian 2-3%. In recent years, universities have invested heavily in on-campus facilities and presumably passed these costs to the students at a rate greater than inflation. One administrator once told me that on-campus facilities…

  • Student Default Rates for 2014 Flatten at 15.4%

    Last week we looked at student repayment rates and noted that longer-term repayment rates continue to decline for five and seven year repayment periods. Repayment rates are in essence a measure of optimism as it is the percentage of students who have made progress in paying down their student loans….

  • Has Distance Education Hit Its Peak?

    Programs offered through distance education or what we might conventionally refer to as online programs actually declined as a percentage of all programs from 10.8% to 10.5% in 2017 and 2016 respectively. This was the first time that distance education has actually declined since this data started being collected by…