Only 1 of Philadelphia’s 47 facilities has not complied with city’s COVID-19 vaccine mandate
By
Danielle Brown
Nov 10, 2021
And then there was one. Just a single nursing home out of the 47 facilities located in Philadelphia has not yet complied with the city’s COVID-19 vaccination mandate for frontline workers.
Federal appeals court blocks ‘public charge’ rule that would have reduced immigrant seniors’ use...
By
Danielle Brown
Jan 09, 2020
A New York federal appeals court this week blocked a federal rule that leading industry advocates warned could hurt immigrant seniors and limit their use of long-term care services.
GAO: Medicaid eligibility screening for long-term care is inconsistent across states
By
McKnight's Staff
Aug 28, 2012
The extent to which states conduct asset verification checks on those seeking Medicaid coverage for long-term care varies greatly by state, a government report finds.
Illinois court upholds record $4.1 million award in nursing home stroke case
By
Kimberly Marselas
Mar 29, 2018
An Illinois judge has upheld a jury ruling to award $4.1 million to the family of a nursing home resident who missed her anti-clotting medication, suffered a stroke — and died four years later.
104-day strike nets nursing home employees a 20-cent raise, health insurance concession
By
Kimberly Marselas
Mar 16, 2018
Workers at Christian Care Home in Ferguson, MO, have approved a new labor contract that calls for across-the-board raises following a 104-day strike.
Shuttered Iowa SNF to pay $100,000 to resolve claims of ‘worthless’ care
By
Feb 03, 2017
The owners of a Iowa nursing home that closed this week have agreed to pay $100,000 to settle allegations that the facility provided “grossly substandard” care to residents.
Good Samaritan sues Kansas over Medicaid application backlog
By
Oct 04, 2016
The Evangelical Lutheran Good Samaritan Society has filed a lawsuit against one of Kansas’ top health officials, claiming the state’s Medicaid application backlog has put some of its residents...
Feds sue nursing home, chief executive for diverting millions in retirement funds
By
Sep 22, 2016
The U.S. Department of Labor is suing a Connecticut nursing home and its chief financial officer, alleging that they funneled $4 million from the facility’s retirement plan to themselves and a religious...
Medical board fights back against telemedicine antitrust case
By
Jun 27, 2016
A Texas medical agency recently urged a federal court to dismiss an antitrust lawsuit that could have wide-ranging effects on the booming telemedicine industry.
Resident’s wife arrested after bloodying administrator’s mouth, police say
By
Apr 14, 2016
The wife of an Ohio nursing home resident was charged with assault on Monday after she allegedly punched and kicked the facility’s executive director, according to local authorities.