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Caregiverlist Nursing Home Star Ratings

By March 4, 2012 - 7:20pm
Sponsored By Caregiverlist

Created by senior care industry professionals, Caregiverlist understands the challenges seniors and their families face when they must choose a nursing home. Sometimes the choice for the right nursing home must be made quickly because of a short-term medical emergency or hospital discharge. Many times a senior will need additional care or rehabilitation while recovering from a stroke, hip replacement or age-related illness.

Caregiverlist’s nursing home star ratings assist you to select a nursing home based on criteria from the nursing homes health inspection report. As nursing home inspections are only conducted once every 12 to 15 months and ownership and other factors can change, use this as a starting point. Caregiverlist also provides the daily nursing home costs for single and double rooms to help you have a better idea of the services that the nursing home will offer.

Caregiverlist Nursing Home Star Ratings

Overall Medicare Star Rating: This is the rating for the overall results of the government inspection reports.

Percentage of Short-stay Residents with Pressure Sores: Residents with pressure sores need to be repositioned regularly to allow the sores to heal and to prevent new pressure sores from developing (repositioning every 2-hours). The higher the percentage of residents with pressure sores indicates the need for more C.N.A.’s to assist and for the question to be asked: Are these residents arriving to the nursing home with pressure sores or developing them after they arrive? Pressure sores can lead to infections and mobility issues. If this number is higher, does the nursing home likewise have a higher percentage of nursing aide staff to residents?

Certified Nursing Aide (C.N.A.) Hours per Resident per Day: Caregiverlist weights this ranking higher, as a C.N.A.’s largest frustration while employed at a nursing home is the inability to adequately care for all of their assigned residents. Residents with extra care needs can take up much more of a nursing aides time during a shift. This is why often private caregivers are hired to assist residents in the nursing home during the time period that Medicare is paying for the nursing home care. As assistance with personal care, exercise and meals directly impact the ability of a resident to recover from illnesses and maintain healthy aging, the C.N.A.-staff-to-resident ratio is a high indicator of the amount of care that will be provided.

Percent of Long-term Residents whose Need for Help with Daily Activities has Increased: Residents needing more assistance with their ADL’s (Activities of Daily Living), require more assistance from a nursing aide. When there are not enough nursing aides staffed, residents miss showers, miss getting dressed daily, miss physical therapy and miss participating in activities. There is an ongoing debate about feeding tube usage and medication usage in nursing homes, as both have increased dramatically in what some say is a way to compensate for a lack of staff to provide adequate care to active residents. If there are more residents needing help with ADL’s, then more C.N.A.’s would be required.

Overall Rating

How is the CaregiverList Rating Calculated?

Medicare Rating (Overall Medicare Star Rating: 20%)

Bed Sore Rating (Percent of Short-stay Residents with Bed Sores: 20%)

C.N.A. Staff (Certified Nursing Aide Hours per Resident per Day: 40%)

ADL's (Percent of Long-term Residents whose Need for Help with Daily Activities has Increased: 20%)

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EmpowHER Guest
Anonymous

In Florida even though there is a large number of disabled as well as seniors, the Nursing homes don't have enough CNA 's.
Nursing homes private contract there staff & when u complain the day it's not there fault that that contract company didn't send in enough staff.
What a disaster 4 our elder years & all of us. Nothing is done about it - if u complain as resident, family , or friend u will be reprimanded or moved 2 another facility & that could b worse. No one seems to address that if u were home receiving care it would cost the government, taxpayers,& family
Much less. Facility care is sub-standard & it is not a hospital. They don't even have to give u water if they are busy or plain don't care.
Even if u need 24 HR care it's less costly to be at home.
The average cost in saving per resident is between roughly between$ 100,000 to more than
300,000 per depending on level of care in a so-called Nursing Home or Rehabilitation center Nursing Homes where u never seem to get rehabed & stay. Usually got the rest of your life even though we are all paying for premium care. The average care in these facilities are 1-1/2 hours of care administered to a resident daily not 24 HR's
Why don't legislature do something about us staying at home spending our own dollars on our own bills & getting less costly care better than a so called facility's care when we can get one on one care.
It puts more people to work & we ourselves pay the overhead as usual. Answer? Is the Nursing Hone lobby bigger than all of us even ourselves plus family?
No one knows about at home care & the difference between the monies that would be saved
Why?

August 11, 2017 - 4:10pm
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We value and respect our HERWriters' experiences, but everyone is different. Many of our writers are speaking from personal experience, and what's worked for them may not work for you. Their articles are not a substitute for medical advice, although we hope you can gain knowledge from their insight.

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