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January 12, 2023 By e-Patient Dave 1 Comment

Integracare Assisted Living charged us full price. Severely understaffed, they stiffed us.

Recently I’ve posted about horror stories that have happened as investor-driven chains get into hospice (here) and nursing homes (here). More broadly, nursing homes and assisted living are called long-term care, aka LTC.

For our mother and family, LTC has meant Less Than Caring. Last night, I posted My family’s disastrous experience with a growth-driven long-term care company, starting with this:

As many of you know, my mother died in October. What we haven’t disclosed until now is that it happened in horror story #3: she passed after a single week of “respite care” provided by the local outlet of a growing chain of assisted living facilities.

Many people asked who it is, and we’re ready to say: the chain is Integracare, and the local facility near Mom’s home in Annapolis is Bay Village.

Here’s how they advertise themselves. It does not in any way match our experience.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: consumerism, long-term care, patient safety, respite care, The Big Ugly 1 Comment

January 11, 2023 By e-Patient Dave 24 Comments

My family’s disastrous experience with a growth-driven long-term care company

Photo of memorial tree at Quiet Waters park, next to the gazebo where she loved to sit
Mom loved to sit in this gazebo, along a tributary of the Chesapeake. Photo by my sister.

This story is not unique. Read the many comments at bottom of even worse treatment others have suffered after paying for “skilled nursing” care.

I’ve been blogging recently about what happens in American healthcare when predatory investor-driven companies start moving into care industries because of, as Pro Publica puts it, “easy money and a lack of regulation.” My first two posts were about recent articles in The New Yorker on companies that are more interested in sales growth than in caring:

  • “For-profit hospice is a vast crime scene, and private equity is holding the knife”
  • Healthcare’s moral crime scene, part 2: private equity takes over a nursing home

As many of you know, my mother died in October. What we haven’t disclosed until now is that it happened in horror story #3: she passed after a single week of “respite care” provided by the local outlet of a growing chain of assisted living facilities.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: consumerism, long-term care, patient safety, Patients as Consumers, respite care, Uncategorized 24 Comments

January 4, 2023 By e-Patient Dave 2 Comments

Healthcare’s moral crime scene, part 2: private equity takes over a nursing home

Last week I wrote “For-profit hospice is a vast crime scene, and private equity is holding the knife,” about a November article in The New Yorker article. I emphasized: “Good hospice can be immensely valuable. But there are predators.”

It doesn’t stop at hospice: in August the magazine also published When Private Equity Takes Over a Nursing Home, a superbly reported piece by Yasmin Rafiei. It’s a nasty story, with the same lesson: when for-profit investors take over a care industry, and they don’t get punished for poor “care,” the cared-for can wind up in danger. Or dead.

I believe that we as consumers need to be aware that some heartless people have gotten into the care industry. Here’s how Rafiei’s article starts:

When St. Joseph’s Home for the Aged … was put up for sale, in October, 2019, the waiting list for a room was three years long. The owners, the Little Sisters of the Poor, were the reason. For 147 years, the nuns had lived at St. Joseph’s with their residents, embodying a philosophy that defined their service: treat older people as family, in facilities that feel like a home.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: consumerism, long-term care, The Big Ugly 2 Comments

December 31, 2022 By e-Patient Dave 31 Comments

“For-profit hospice is a vast crime scene, and private equity is holding the knife”

Screen capture of New Yorker article headline

Good hospice can be immensely valuable. But there are predators.

A wise friend referred me to this New Yorker article last month about a Pro Publica investigation. I skimmed it then, and today I read it in full. It’s appalling. If anyone you know is considering hospice, or has been “invited” by a company to consider it, beware. Here’s what the friend basically said – and they were right:

For-profit hospice is a vast crime scene,
and private equity is holding the knife

Note, I’m talking (and the article talks) about for-profit hospice companies. For-profit hospice chains bill the government four times more per patient than not-for-profits, and focus on both maximizing admissions and cutting costs (i.e. cutting back on services), all the while gaming the system to barely squeak under the wire before Medicare makes them give back the money.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: consumerism, hospice, The Big Ugly 31 Comments

December 8, 2022 By e-Patient Dave 1 Comment

2022 Hospital Safety Grades announced at Leapfrog Group’s annual meeting: excellence and the power of transparency

On Tuesday I attended one of the most inspiring events in the annual calendar of health events: the Leapfrog Group’s annual meeting and awards ceremony. I could talk all day about what an important organization this is, because they don’t just do great work, they’re getting results in the world.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: consumerism, patient safety 1 Comment

April 29, 2019 By e-Patient Dave 3 Comments

Getting ornery on social media: What I’m doing in 2019, episode 2

Sunday night I blogged this:

I haven’t been blogging nearly as much as I did five years ago, largely because my early blogging was all about trying to figure out “what the heck is up with the American healthcare system???” … it’s been two years since I had any new realizations.

Why would “figuring it out” make me stop blogging? Because as a change activist who’s also a public speaker, I’m gripped by one question: “What could be said that would make any difference?” There literally is no point in saying anything else. So once I realized how locked-in the system is, how intractable it is to change, I lost interest in flapping my gums and fingers.

But new things are in the wind, and it’s time to start pushing out those top learnings as foundation for what’s next. So, game on – in responses to two tweets, I got ornery:

[Read more…]

Filed Under: consumerism, cost cutting edition, Culture change, Evolution, Health policy, Patients as Consumers, Social media 3 Comments

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