"Nursing Homes Shocked at 'Insanely Wrong' CMS Data on COVID-19" by Cheryl Clark
Thanks to Maxwell for contributing this article.
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One facility supposedly had eight coronavirus deaths for each
bed
June 9, 2020
When the administrator of the Saugus Rehab and
Nursing Center in Saugus, Massachusetts, heard that a new Medicare website reported her facility had 794 confirmed cases of
COVID-19 -- the second highest in the country -- and 281 cases among staff, she
gasped.
"Oh my God. Where are they getting those
numbers from?" said Josephine Ajayi. "That doesn't make any
sense."
Those weren't the numbers that her facility
reported to the CDC's National Healthcare Safety Network, under new rules from
the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), she said.
Ajayi said her 80-bed facility actually
reported 45 residents have tested positive and five residents died, although
the CMS website showed no Saugus deaths. About 19 staff members tested positive
for the virus, and most have returned to work, she said.
Officials at skilled nursing facilities around
the country said Monday they were shocked to see their data reported
inaccurately -- wildly so in some cases, as at the Saugus home -- on the new
CMS public website launched Thursday. The numbers are scaring families, harming
their reputations, and in some cases are physically impossible, given the
number of beds or staff in their facilities, they said.
CMS approved an interim final rule May 1
requiring more than 15,000 nursing homes receiving Medicare or Medicaid
reimbursement to report COVID data by May 31, and weekly going forward.
The data fill 56 columns detailing COVID-19
infected residents, staff, testing, and equipment, going back to at least May
1. As of Thursday, CMS said 88% of the nursing homes in the country had
reported. Going forward after a grace period ended June 7, they risk fines of
$1,000 and up for every week they fail to update their data.
But in many cases, nursing home officials said
their data were somehow scrambled, either because nursing home personnel
reported in the wrong columns, or the numbers were loaded incorrectly somewhere
between the CDC and CMS.
For example, Southern Pointe Living Center in
Colbert, Oklahoma, with 95 beds, was reported to have had 339 residents die of
COVID-19, yet no confirmed or suspected cases.
"We have not lost anyone nor have we had
a [COVID-19] case in the building," said a woman identifying herself as an
assistant at Southern Pointe but who declined to give her full name. The day
after CMS released the data, on Friday, she said someone from the CDC called
the facility to ask if their numbers were correct as reported, "and we
told them no."
She added, "I don't know how that
happened but that is an error on their end." As of Tuesday morning, the
posted data had not been corrected.
"Insanely wrong"
MedPage Today first learned of the inaccuracies
shortly after publishing an article Friday on the new public database.
In that article was a list (since removed) of "outliers" -- those
with the highest numbers of cases and deaths among residents and staff -- that
included Dellridge Health and Rehabilitation Center in Paramus, New Jersey. The
CMS data indicated it had the most COVID-19 deaths of any nursing home in the
country at 753.
That number is "insanely wrong,"
Jonathan Mechaly, Dellridge's marketing director, wrote in a frantic email.
"We are a 90-bed center and have had less than 20 deaths!! How do you
report such inaccurate numbers?"
After a download of the data, a quick sort of
the columns easily reveals extreme totals in various categories. But no one
called those nursing homes before the data were released to doublecheck, for
example, when 100-bed Smith Village in Chicago was shown to have 1,105
confirmed COVID-19 cases among residents and 955 confirmed COVID-19 cases among
staff, the most in the country.
"We apparently misread the instructions,
which were not very clear," Yahaira Ramirez, Smith Village's director of
clinical operations told MedPage Today. The facility has had only
38 positive cases among residents and 14 deaths, and among staff, 37 positive
or suspected cases but no deaths, she said. But instead of showing up as a
total, those numbers somehow appeared as if there were additional cases every
day in May. No one caught the error.
It would have been helpful if someone from
either agency had at least checked on the highest outliers before publishing,
Ramirez said. "We've been trying to abide by a lot of the guidelines
(from) CMS and CDC, but it's been challenging. You talk to different people and
you get a different answer. Unfortunately, I'm not surprised that they haven't
reached out."
Asked why there appeared to be so many errors
in the data, a CMS spokesman emailed this response:
"As with any new reporting program, there
can be data submission errors in the beginning. In an effort to be transparent,
CMS made the data collected by the CDC public as quickly as possible balancing
transparency and speed against the potential of initial data errors."
"CMS is advising nursing homes when their
submitted data has not passed certain quality checks so they can review the CDC
submission instructions and their data submission for accuracy. As CMS
continues to analyze the data going forward we expect fewer errors as nursing
home staff get used to these requirements and CMS has more time to quality
check the data."
Asked why CMS, at the very least, did not
contact the highest outliers, for whom such large numbers of COVID-19 cases or
deaths were highly unlikely because of their size, the spokesman did not
respond.
It's also true that CMS Administrator Seema
Verma, in announcing the database's launch, told reporters on a phone call that
it would probably include inaccurate data.
Destroying family trust
Paula Sanders, an attorney in Harrisburg,
Pennsylvania, who represents some 200 skilled nursing facilities, said many of
her clients "can't figure out where these numbers are coming from"
and have been "frustrated" in trying to get them corrected since
Thursday.
"This has destroyed the trust between the
facilities and the families, because they've been reporting and telling the
families, these are our numbers," Sanders said. "Then these numbers
come out and don't make any sense at all. Unfortunately, some families are
going to believe the government over the facilities."
Sanders, who is on the legal committees of two
nursing home advocacy groups, the American Health Care Association and
LeadingAge, said within the two federal agencies, "there was such a rush
to get these numbers out that there was no quality control. You'd think the
government would say, 'yes, we want to absolutely make sure the data we're providing
is correct, because the reputation [is in jeopardy] for the facilities if we're
wrong.'"
"But they weren't doing that. The amount
of time these facilities have spent away from patient care trying to respond to
questions from reporters or family over meaningless numbers...it's a shame.
It's just a shame."
Adding to the confusion, Sanders said, was the
CMS rulemaking process regarding reporting requirements and directions, which
seemed to change even after facilities started submitting.
Sometimes the fault was admittedly that of the
facilities. The CMS website showed that 92-bed Robison Jewish Health Center in
Portland, Oregon, had eight staff members die of COVID-19. In fact, they had no
deaths. Administrator Krista Mattox said the problem was their own data entry
error, "but it caused ripples through our Oregon state licensing
office."
It would have been nice if either agency had
sent an email notification showing how their data would show up, but that
didn't happen.
Karl Steinberg, MD, president-elect for the
Society for Post-Acute and Long-Term Care Medicine, said it's "highly
improbable that nursing homes would make such mistakes in their data, for
example, making the numbers of deaths higher than they actually were."
He added that the whole effort to demonize
COVID-19 cases in nursing homes is wrong-headed and counterproductive.
"Seema Verma has pretty much said we're going to slam these facilities,
bring the hammer down hard. But to conflate quality of care in a facility with
the number of cases is horrific" especially since in some parts of the
country, nursing homes were required by their state governments to accept
COVID-19 patients.
"I think they're just trying to scapegoat
and lay blame on the facilities," said Steinberg, medical director of a San
Diego area hospice. "Certainly some could have done better, but in a lot
of cases they were like sitting ducks."
Last Updated June 11, 2020
Source: Medpage Today
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