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In 1986, the Institute of Medicine released the report Improving the Quality of Care in Nursing Homes. However, despite three decades of efforts to improve the quality of care in nursing homes, significant challenges still remain.
The Committee on the Quality of Care in Nursing Homes examined how our nation delivers, regulates, finances and measures quality of nursing home care, including the long-standing challenges brought to light by the COVID-19 pandemic.
The primary sponsor is The John A Hartford Foundation. Additional support was provided by the Commonwealth Fund, The Sephardic Foundation, Jewish Healthcare Foundation and The Samuels Foundation.
Featured publication
Consensus
·2022
Nursing homes play a unique dual role in the long-term care continuum, serving as a place where people receive needed health care and a place they call home. Ineffective responses to the complex challenges of nursing home care have resulted in a system that often fails to ensure the well-being and s...
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Description
An ad hoc committee of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine will examine how our nation delivers, finances, regulates, and measures the quality of nursing home care with particular emphasis on challenges that have arisen in light of the COVID-19 pandemic. The committee will consider a broad range of issues such as:
- ways to generate and assess the evidence base for interventions, structures, policies, and care models to promote care innovation while assuring quality of care;
- the impact of current oversight and regulatory structures (including enforcement and penalties) on care quality and outcomes, which may include examination of: the meaningfulness of the current five star rating system and how it is interpreted by consumers and clinicians; and /or the validity, efficiency, and effectiveness of the current survey and certification structures and methods, including inspection standards, training of surveyors, and their adherence to standards.
- the appropriateness of current emergency preparedness regulations and strategies for nursing homes in light of different environmental and pandemic threats to residents.
- the influence of current nursing home real estate ownership and payment models on the delivery of high-quality care and regulatory compliance;
- the role of the facility medical director as the clinical leader in nursing homes;
- strategies to attract, train, and retain a more skilled workforce to nursing homes and survey agencies; and
- the role of nursing homes in the continuum of post-acute and long-term care.
The committee will develop a set of findings and recommendations to delineate a framework and general principles for improving the quality of care in today’s nursing homes, delivering high quality care in a consistent manner, and ensuring the safety and well-being of residents and staff in nursing homes. The committee may also consider the relevance of their findings and recommendations to other long-term care settings, if applicable.
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Sponsors
Commonwealth Fund
Jewish Healthcare Foundation
The Fan Fox & Leslie R. Samuels Foundation
The John A. Hartford Foundation
The Sephardic Foundation on Aging
Staff
Laurene Graig
Lead
Tracy Lustig
Lead
Nikita Varman
Rukshana Gupta