Study Shows Weekend and Daily Variation in Nursing Home Staffing Led to Poorer Clinical Quality

Mar 30, 2022 | Nursing HPRD & Turnover, Research Studies of PBJ Data

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Daily Variation in Nursing Home Staffing and Its Association With Quality Measures

Is daily variation in nursing home staffing associated with quality, and does it offer additional information to measures of average staffing levels? This quality improvement study of 13 339 nursing homes found that daily variation of staffing was significantly associated with the 5-Star Survey and Quality Measures rankings.

There was little agreement between the variation and the average staffing measures on quality decile rankings of nursing homes, suggesting that staffing variation provides new quality improvement information.

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Mukamel DB, Saliba D, Ladd H, Konetzka RT. Daily Variation in Nursing Home Staffing and Its Association With Quality Measures. JAMA Netw Open. 2022;5(3):e222051. doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2022.2051

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Daily Variation in Nursing Home Staffing Led to Poorer Clinical Quality

Daily variation in nursing home staffing was associated with poorer clinical quality in Medicare and Medicaid-certified nursing homes, suggesting that reporting staffing variation could help provide new quality improvement information, according to a study published in JAMA Network Open.

Typically, nursing home quality regulations include minimum staffing standards to ensure that facilities provide residents with quality care. Meeting the average staffing level has been associated with better performance on process quality measures, on-site survey scores, and resident outcome measures.

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Baily, Victoria. “Daily Variation in Nursing Home Staffing Led to Poorer Clinical Quality.” Revcycle Intelligence, 15 Mar. 2022, revcycleintelligence.com/news/daily-variation-in-nursing-home-staffing-led-to-poorer-clinical-quality.

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Why Staffing Ratios May Not Be the Best Way to Measure How Staffing Impacts Nursing Home Quality

As the Biden administration looks to establish a minimum staffing requirement for the nursing home industry as part of its reform package, evidence suggests that measuring daily staffing variation may be just as important in understanding how staffing affects care quality.

That’s according to a study published in the JAMA Network Open this week looking at how daily staffing at nursing homes is associated with five-star quality measures.

What the study found was average staffing levels and minimum staffing standards do not fully capture the association of more staffing to better nursing home quality.

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Zorn, Alex, and Alex Zorn. “Why Staffing Ratios May Not Be the Best Way to Measure How Staffing Impacts Nursing Home Quality.” Skilled Nursing News, Mar. 2022, skillednursingnews.com/2022/03/why-staffing-ratios-may-not-be-the-best-way-to-measure-how-staffing-impacts-nursing-home-quality.

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Instability In Staffing Levels at Nursing Homes Affects Quality of Care for Residents

Nursing home staffing levels often decline on weekends. In November 2018, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) identified facilities with low staffing on weekends and directed states to conduct surveys in a portion of these facilities on weekends. Then, in January 2022, CMS began posting weekend nurse staffing levels at nursing homes, in addition to a single staffing measure, citing two reports by the Health and Human Services’ Office of Inspector General about the need for additional staffing information on the federal website Care Compare.

A new study confirms the importance of providing more detailed staffing information to the public. Analyzing staffing levels at 14,499 nursing facilities in 2017 and 2018, researchers found that daily variation in nurse staffing levels (registered nurses (RNs) and certified nurse assistants (CNAs)), which they describe as “instability of staffing levels,” negatively affects quality of care for residents. They note that although consumers recognize the importance of staffing hours in general, they may not understand that daily staffing variability is also associated with quality. They explain why:

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Edelman, T. “Instability In Staffing Levels at Nursing Homes Affects Quality of Care for Residents.” Center for Medicare Advocacy, 23 Mar. 2022, medicareadvocacy.org/instability-in-staffing-levels-at-nursing-homes.

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Research shows COVID-19 vaccination mandates don’t negatively affect nursing home staffing

State COVID-19 vaccination mandates increased vaccinations among direct caregivers without negatively affecting staffing levels, according to the results of a study published Friday in JAMA Health Forum.

The researchers studied vaccination rates and staffing shortages that were reported via the Center for Disease Control and Prevention’s National Healthcare Safety Network from June 6, 2021, through Nov. 14, 2021.

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Nursing home staff turnover up 25 percent from last year

The national nursing home staff turnover rate for all employees is up 25% from last year. That’s according to findings included in the 45th annual Nursing Home Salary & Benefits Report released Thursday by Hospital & Healthcare Compensation Service.

The average national turnover rate across executive-level positions and those in dining services, environmental services, marketing and therapy was 29.17%, according to the report. The national average turnover among registered nurses, licensed practical nurses and certified nursing assistants was 38.68%.

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Study confirms lower turnover linked to higher quality of care

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“While these actions are challenging — especially given that nursing homes are navigating the COVID-19 pandemic, they are clearly warranted if we seek an improved quality of care for nursing home residents,” Qing Zheng, Ph.D., lead author and health economist at research firm Abt Associates

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State of Skilled Nursing Facilities Today, Planning for the Future

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Nursing facilities should work now to determine changes that can be made – clinically, operationally, and financially – for better or more strategic outcomes.

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Appropriate Staffing Standards in Post-Acute and Long-Term Care

A push to mandate staffing levels at both state and federal levels persists after several decades.

Skilled Nursing Facilities (SNFs) and long-term care (LTC) facilities (also referred to as nursing homes or nursing facilities) are no longer just for aging geriatric residents. Acuity level has increased and entering residents are younger, and/or with far more medically and socially complex needs (including more management of behaviors, tracheostomies, complex wound care, drains/tubes, life vests, and IV medications). In addition, experiences during the COVID-19 pandemic confirmed the importance of having sufficient staffing based on facility need and of hiring high-quality, well-trained staff.

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