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HHS News Release on NHQI HHS News Release on NHQI
News Release
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Tuesday, Nov. 12, 2002
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Contact: CMS Public Affairs
(202) 690-6145
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HHS LAUNCHES NATIONAL NURSING HOME QUALITY INITIATIVE
Broad Effort to Improve Quality in Nursing Homes Across the Country
HHS Secretary Tommy G. Thompson today launched the national Nursing Home
Quality Initiative to further improve the quality of care given to the millions
of Americans who live in nursing homes. The initiative combines new information
for consumers about the quality of care provided in individual nursing homes
with important resources available to nursing homes to improve the quality of
care in their facilities.
"This is a new approach to bringing about better quality care in our
nation's nursing homes," Secretary Thompson said. "Not only will
consumers be better informed, but nursing homes themselves will be able to see
more clearly what they must do to make the quality grade. They will have to
compete in the quality arena. This is a major effort, and it will grow and
improve over time, with improving data and new levels of collaboration to help
nursing homes ensure high quality care."
The national launch follows the successful six-state pilot project, which
involved nursing homes serving Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries in Colorado,
Florida, Maryland, Ohio, Rhode Island and Washington. The pilot project launched
in April 2002.
"The pilot demonstrated that these measures aren't just good for
consumers -- they're good for nursing homes as well," said Secretary
Thompson. "More than half of the nursing homes in the six pilot states
requested technical assistance to help them improve their care and that is
exactly the type of collaborative effort we envisioned -- and what we want to
continue to see happen."
On Wednesday, Nov. 13, HHS' Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
(CMS) will publish advertisements in 71 newspapers in all 50 states that include
a sampling of the quality data. The complete quality data, as well as "A
Guide To Choosing A Nursing Home," are available at Medicare's consumer Web
site, http://www.medicare.gov, and through Medicare's help line, 1-800-MEDICARE
(1-800-633-4227).
HHS' National Nursing Home Quality Initiative is a four-pronged effort,
consisting of:
- CMS' continuing regulatory and enforcement efforts conducted by state
survey agencies;
- improved consumer information on the quality of care in nursing homes;
- continual community-based, quality improvement programs offered to nursing
homes by Medicare's Quality Improvement Organizations (QIOs); and
- collaboration and partnership to leverage knowledge and resources.
"We know nursing homes are just as interested in improving the high
quality care they already give to their residents as we are," CMS
administrator Tom Scully said. "By making this information available to the
nursing homes and consumers, we are seeing a collaborative effort to do even
more to raise the bar on quality."
To support CMS' evolutionary process of improving nursing home quality
measures, a National Quality Forum (NQF) steering committee recommended domains
of care for the public reporting pilot. NQF's nursing home steering committee
included providers, state government representatives, consumer advocates, and
others. For the national rollout, CMS made minor modifications to the list of
measures, based on a comprehensive validation report and experience during the
pilot.
The 10 quality measures fall into two categories -- six for chronic care
patients (long-term stay residents) and four for post-acute care patients
(short-term patients).
The six measures for long-stay residents are:
- percentage of residents with loss of ability in basic daily activities
- percentage of residents with infections
- percentage of residents with pain
- percentage of residents with pressure sores
- percentage of residents with pressure sores (with additional facility
level risk adjustment)
- percentage of residents in physical restraints
The four measures for short-stay residents are:
- percentage of short-stay residents with delirium
- percentage of short-stay residents with delirium (with additional facility
level risk adjustment)
- percentage of short-stay residents who walk as well or better
- percentage of short-stay residents with pain
Another key component of the initiative is the assistance that every Quality
Improvement Organization (QIO) has available to improve quality of care in local
nursing home facilities. QIOs are CMS contractors that have offered improvement
assistance to hospitals, physician offices, and, in some states nursing homes
over the past decade. As part of the Quality Initiative, the QIOs are expanding
their scope by providing information and consultation to skilled nursing
facilities in all states.
In addition, QIOs and state and local long-term care ombudsmen will use the
new data, along with other information and personal visits, to help families
make informed decisions about placement in nursing homes. The ombudsmen are
primarily volunteers who help nursing-home residents and their families on a
daily basis and are trained and funded through HHS' Administration on Aging.
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