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Nursing Home Requirements and Residents' Rights

Current Federal Requirements

In Spring 2018, Consumer Voice Executive Director Lori Smetanka, along with Eric Carlson and Nancy Stone, wrote an article published in the National Academy of Elder Law Attorneys (NAELA) Journal entitled “Advocating for Nursing Facility Residents Under the Revised Federal Requirements.” The article provides a comprehensive guide to the revised federal nursing facility regulations, focusing on care planning and person-centered care; admission, transfer, and discharge procedures; grievance procedures; resident rights, choice, safety, and self-determination; staffing, medications, and quality of care; and protections from abuse, neglect, and exploitation. It also discusses advocacy and enforcement issues and further CMS rulemaking activities under the Trump administration which will likely result in changes to the rules.

Issue Briefs

Consumer Voice, in partnership with Justice in Aging and the Center for Medicare Advocacy, developed a series of briefs entitled “A Closer Look at the Revised Nursing Facility Regulations.”

Why the Recently-Revised Nursing Home Regulations are Vital for Nursing Home Residents

The revised regulations contain important consumer protections that were not included in the previous regulations.

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Assessments, Care Planning, and Discharge Planning

Revised nursing facility regulations broadly affect facility practices, including assessment care planning and discharge planning.

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Unnecessary Drugs and Antipsychotic Medications

Regulations about unnecessary drugs and antipsychotic drugs have been moved from the quality of care section to the pharmacy services section.

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Involuntary Transfer and Discharge

The involuntary transfer/discharge regulations have changed, but not dramatically.

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Nursing Services

Revised nursing facility regulations broadly affect facility practices, including nursing services.

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Admission

The revised regulations broadly prohibit facilities from using admission agreements or other documents that waive a resident’s rights.

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Visitation Rights

The revised nursing facility regulations affirm the rights of residents to receive visitors of their choosing at the time of their choosing

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Rehabilitation Services

The substantive requirements for specialized rehabilitative services are largely unchanged from the prior version of the regulations, with the exception of “respiratory therapy.”

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Return to Facility After Hospitalization

Bed hold rights are set by state law. Federal law complements state law by requiring facilities to notify residents of those rights.

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Grievances and Resident/Family Councils

Residents have the right to file grievances and the facility must work to resolve those concerns promptly.

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Quality of Care

The substantive requirements for quality of care are retained in the revised regulations.

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Oppose Weakening and Delay of Federal Nursing Home Rules

Since their release in October 2016, there have been efforts to undermine, repeal, and delay these standards.

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