GAO: fire safety hazards in nursing homes.Nursing home fires can be deadly--and it's partially the government's fault due to poor oversight of current safety standards Safety standards are standards designed to ensure the safety of products, activities or processes, etc. They may be advisory or compulsory and are normally laid down by an advisory or regulatory body that may be either voluntary or statutory. . That was the conclusion reached in a new report by the Government Accountability Office The Government Accountability Office (GAO) is the audit, evaluation, and investigative arm of the United States Congress, and thus an agency in the Legislative Branch of the United States Government. , which noted that 59 percent of U.S. nursing homes were cited for fire safety deficiencies during their most recent inspections in 2003. "Nursing Home Fire Safety: Recent Fires Highlight Weaknesses in Federal Standards and Oversight" also noted, however, that state surveyors missed or failed to cite, on average, more than two deficiencies per nursing home surveyed that year. Such oversights led to tragedies such as last year's fatal fires at nursing homes in Tennessee and Connecticut in which a combined 31 residents died, according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. the report. In the case of the fire at Greenwood Health Center in Hartford, Conn., state surveyors visited less than a month before and found no violations of federal standards, according to the report. But subsequent investigations after the late night/early morning fire--which killed 16 people--found that the home's night shift had not been conducting required fire drills, nor did that shift's staff follow its prescribed fire plan when the blaze started in a resident's room on Feb. 26, 2003. Eight months prior to the Sept. 25, 2003 fire at NHC NHC National Hurricane Center NHC Naval Historical Center NHC National Housing Conference NHC National Hurricane Conference NHC National Healthcare Corporation NHC No Homers Club (Simpsons cartoon) Healthcare Center in Nashville, surveyors failed to detect a deficiency that allowed smoke to travel between floors, according to the study. Five of the 15 fatalities were residents on upper floors who died due to smoke inhalation Smoke Inhalation Definition Smoke inhalation is breathing in the harmful gases, vapors, and particulate matter contained in smoke. Description Smoke inhalation typically occurs in victims or firefighters caught in structural fires. , the report stated. In addition, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), previously known as the Health Care Financing Administration (HCFA), is a federal agency within the United States Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) that administers the Medicare program and (CMS (1) See content management system and color management system. (2) (Conversational Monitor System) Software that provides interactive communications for IBM's VM operating system. ) is required each year to conduct its own safety inspections in at least 5 percent of all state-surveyed nursing homes. Yet, no assessments were conducted in 27 states in 2003, according to the report. The report was also critical of federal standards that do not require sprinklers in older nursing homes of "certain noncombustible construction," such as the Nashville and Hartford facilities. An estimated 20 to 30 percent of nursing homes nationwide do not have full automatic sprinkler protection, the report noted. According to Kathryn Allen, director of Medicaid and private health insurance issues at GAO in Washington, D.C., CMS avoided requiring installation of sprinklers in all facilities due to the high cost involved and a decline in multiple-death fires as a result of fire safety standards adopted in 1971. There was an average of one fire-related death per year in non-sprinkler-systemed nursing homes from 1983 to 2002 and 0.3 deaths per year during the past 10 years. "(It was believed) that the estimated cost of retrofitting older nursing homes nationwide outweighed the benefit," Allen said. "This position is being reevaluated, however, because of (those) nursing home fires." A sprinkler requirement is likely to be years away, however, because "stakeholders Stakeholders All parties that have an interest, financial or otherwise, in a firm-stockholders, creditors, bondholders, employees, customers, management, the community, and the government. " such as the nursing home industry, CMS, and the National Fire Protection Association must develop a consensus and implement such a standard, Allen said. William Benson William Benson (1682 — 2 February 1754) was a talented amateur architect and an ambitious and self-serving Whig place-holder in the government of George I. In 1718, Benson arranged to displace the aged Sir Christopher Wren as Surveyor General of the Royal Works, a project in , president of the National Citizens' Coalition
The nursing home industry would support such a requirement if the federal government helped pay the estimated $1.1 billion needed to install sprinklers industry wide, according to Alan DeFend, vice president of the American Health Care Association The American Health Care Association (AHCA) is non-profit federation of affiliated state health organizations, together representing more than 10,000 non-profit and for-profit assisted living, nursing facility, developmentally-disabled, and subacute care providers that care for in Washington, D.C. Facilities should also have at least three years to meet the requirement, he added. Rep. John Larson John B. Larson (born July 22 1948), American politician, has been a Democratic member of the United States House of Representatives since 1999, representing Connecticut's At-large congressional district (map). , D-Conn., said he has a bill in the works that would require every nursing home reimbursed by Medicare or Medicaid to have full automatic sprinklers. The federal government would reimburse nursing homes for all costs of sprinklers installed since September 2003. Meanwhile, CMS has improved fire safety inspection oversight, CMS Administrator Mark McClellan Mark Barr McClellan (born June 26, 1963) was sworn in as Administrator for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services in the United States Department of Health and Human Services on March 25, 2004. said. Its actions include increasing the number of validation surveys the agency will conduct in 2005. CMS will also update the CMS automated information system The term automated information system means an assembly of computer hardware, software, firmware, or any combination of these, configured to accomplish specific information-handling operations, such as communication, computation, dissemination, processing, and storage of to ensure that the sprinkler status of each nursing home is available to all surveyors, issue new instructions to states and regional CMS offices to ensure prompt investigation of injury-causing fires, and issue an updated set of national life-safety code manuals to each state to ensure investigators know all existing standards.
The 10 states with the highest percentage of nursing home fire
safety deficiencies following their most recent surveys in 2003:
Rank State Number of Percentage of surveyed homes
homes surveyed with fire safety deficiencies
1. North Dakota 84 98.8
2. Montana 101 97.0
3. Utah 90 96.7
4. Wyoming 39 94.9
5. Nevada 44 93.2
6. Michigan 431 92.1
7. South Dakota 113 88.5
9 Texas 1,143 84.4
10 Pennsylvania 740 82.3
Nation 16,334 58.9
Source: Government Accountability Office [formerly U.S. General
Accounting Office]
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