New Research on Health Care Staff Turnover and Quality of Care at Nursing Homes

Oct 9, 2023 | Research Studies of PBJ Data, Nursing HPRD & Turnover

News Digest: Research into union impact on turnover and retention

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Research Examines Health Care Staff Turnover and Quality of Care at Nursing Homes

In this cross-sectional study of 1.45 million facility-weeks (corresponding to 13 826 unique facilities), within a given facility periods of greater turnover of nursing staff were associated with lower quality of care along multiple measures according to health inspection citations and resident assessments

Findings from this study suggest that efforts to monitor and reduce nursing home staff turnover may be well founded, as turnover appears to be negatively associated with resident health and safety.

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Shen, Karen, et al. “Health Care Staff Turnover and Quality of Care at Nursing Homes.” JAMA Internal Medicine, vol. 183, no. 11, American Medical Association, Nov. 2023, p. 1247. https://doi.org/10.1001/jamainternmed.2023.5225.

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COMMENTARY: Nursing Home Staff Turnover and the Whole-of-Person Framework for Staff Retention

…While Dean et al have added important evidence to the role of labor unionization to combat the US nursing home staff turnover crisis, it may be worth reviewing staff retention policies in a truly earnest fashion. What is it that makes a person stay? Exploring policies that promote a community approach to recruitment and retention and build an organic sense of belonging-in-place may be key for legislators and health care policy experts trying to solve the problem of US nursing home staff turnover.

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Bergman, Christian. “Nursing Home Staff Turnover and the Whole-of-Person Framework for Staff Retention.JAMA Network Open, vol. 6, no. 10, Oct. 2023, p. e2337827. https://doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.37827.

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Researchers say retention needs more attention as feds push to increase nursing home staffing levels

With so much of the nursing home staffing spotlight honed lately on increasing staffing levels, new study results emphasize the importance of experienced nurse and administrator retention as perhaps equally important for providing quality care.

“Given the recently announced federal minimum staffing mandates, there is a lot of policy focus at the moment on boosting the number of staff hours per president day. But our results suggest that we should also be giving similar weight to finding ways to retain staff and reduce turnover in an effort to improve nursing home quality,” said study co-author Brian McGarry, PhD, of the Division of Geriatrics and Aging, in the Department of Medicine at the University of Rochester.

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Berklan, James M. “Researchers Say Retention Needs More Attention as Feds Push to Increase Nursing Home Staffing Levels.” McKnight’s Long-Term Care News, 9 Oct. 2023, www.mcknights.com/news/researchers-say-retention-needs-more-attention-as-feds-push-to-increase-nursing-home-staffing-levels.

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High Staff Turnover in Nursing Homes Linked to Decreased Quality of Care

If nursing homes want to improve quality of care, it is imperative that they reduce staff turnover, and focus their efforts more on retention than recruitment.

This is according to a JAMA study released Monday, which also revealed that the average annual turnover rate in nursing homes was as high as 128%, indicating a revolving door of staff.

High staff turnover rates can disrupt the continuity of care, hinder the formation of vital staff-resident relationships, and limit the acquisition of skills and institutional knowledge through on-the-job experience, JAMA researchers said.

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Grebbin, Shelby. “High Staff Turnover in Nursing Homes Linked to Decreased Quality of Care.” Skilled Nursing News, 9 Oct. 2023, skillednursingnews.com/2023/10/high-staff-turnover-in-nursing-homes-linked-to-decreased-quality-of-care.

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RESEARCH LETTER: Labor Unions and Staff Turnover in US Nursing Homes

Among 12,633 nursing homes with total nursing staff turnover data available, the mean (SD) staff turnover rate was 52.6% (15.5%). After excluding 1216 facilities with missing data on covariates, 11 417 nursing homes (1971 [17.3%] with unions) were included in our analyses. We found that the presence of a union was associated with a 1.7 percentage point decrease in staff turnover (95% CI, −2.72 to −0.63 percentage points; P = .002) (Table). We also found that this association was significantly larger when the county-level proportion of nursing homes that were unionized was high.

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Dean, Adam, et al. “Labor Unions and Staff Turnover in US Nursing Homes.” JAMA Network Open, vol. 6, no. 10, Oct. 2023, p. e2337898. https://doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.37898.

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Unionization may decrease staffing turnover in nursing homes: study

As nursing homes prepare for the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ proposed minimum staffing mandate — 0.55 hours per resident day for registered nurses and 2.45 hours per resident day for nurse aides — many are left wondering about the effect on staffing turnover.

Senior care advocates LeadingAge and the American Health Care Association estimate that the proposed mandate could cost up to $7.1 billion in the first year alone. They also argue that high rates of staff turnover would make it difficult for many employers to comply with this proposed requirement.

According to a recent study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, however, “labor unions representing nursing home workers, such as the Service Employees International Union (SEIU), argue that unions can decrease turnover by improving job quality, thus helping to maintain a stable workforce and improving resident care.”

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Gaivin, Kathleen Steele. “Unionization May Decrease Staffing Turnover in Nursing Homes: Study.” McKnight’s Senior Living, 18 Oct. 2023, www.mcknightsseniorliving.com/home/news/business-daily-news/unionization-may-decrease-staffing-turnover-in-nursing-homes-study.

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Union Presence – Especially at a County Level – Associated with Lower Turnover at Nursing Homes

Unionization in the nursing home space may decrease staff turnover, and help employers meet proposed staffing minimums – especially in counties where most nursing homes are unionized.

The presence of a union is associated with a 1.7 percentage point decrease in staff turnover, according to a study published on Friday in JAMA Network Open. This association was “significantly larger” when the county-level proportion of nursing homes that were unionized was high, researchers noted.

Specifically, when more than 75% of nursing homes in a county were unionized, facility-level presence of a union was associated with a 9% decrease in staff turnover.

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Stulick, Amy. “Union Presence – Especially at a County Level – Associated With Lower Turnover at Nursing Homes.” Skilled Nursing News, 13 Oct. 2023, skillednursingnews.com/2023/10/union-presence-especially-at-a-county-level-associated-with-lower-turnover-at-nursing-homes.

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Unions to the rescue?

Ben Franklin famously assured us life has two guarantees. They are higher taxes and death. If Ben were alive today and owned a nursing home, he’d probably add a third: Unions will ruin everything.

Skilled care operators tend to see unions and their members as sycophants at best, predators at worst. Unions, it seems, are always demanding higher wages and better working conditions. Lofty goals, perhaps. But each can put a real strain on already tight budgets.

Unionized employees also can undermine the ability of managers to, well, manage. But perhaps most unforgivable of all, they often serve as a catalyst for more rules and regulations.

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O’Connor, John. “Unions to the Rescue?” McKnight’s Long-Term Care News, 16 Oct. 2023, www.mcknights.com/daily-editors-notes/unions-to-the-rescue.

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New research ties unions to lower nursing home staff turnover. Could they be a key partner ahead of federal mandate?

Union representation is linked to a significant reduction in nursing home staff turnover, according to a first-of-its-kind research letter published Friday in JAMA Network Open.

Among the 17.3% of nursing homes that were unionized in 2021, researchers found a 3.2% relative drop in turnover. In counties where more than 75% of nursing homes were unionized, the effect was a 17.1% reduction.

“Unions fight to make jobs better for workers, and that could mean higher wages and better benefits, safer working conditions … infection control policies, PPE and protection from COVID-19 during the pandemic,” said Adam Dean, PhD, associate professor in the Department of Political Science at George Washington University. “So in all the ways that unions fight to make jobs better, we would expect workers to stay in those jobs because they’re better jobs.”

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Marselas, Kimberly. “New Research Ties Unions to Lower Nursing Home Staff Turnover. Could They Be a Key Partner Ahead of Federal Mandate?” McKnight’s Long-Term Care News, 16 Oct. 2023, www.mcknights.com/news/new-research-ties-unions-to-lower-nursing-home-staff-turnover-could-they-be-a-key-partner-ahead-of-federal-mandate.

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

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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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Study Shows Weekend and 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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What are the four key findings and what can nursing home leaders do today to put themselves on the path of recovery? Some of the answers include strategic planning, operational assessments, and self-evaluation.

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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