Severe Neighborhood Deprivation and Nursing Home Staffing in the US

Aug 8, 2022 | Minimum Staffing, Research & Studies of PBJ Data

Severe Neighborhood Deprivation and Nursing Home Staffing in the United States

Low nursing home staffing in the United States is a growing safety concern. Socioeconomic deprivation in the local areas surrounding a nursing home may be a barrier to improving staffing rates but has been poorly studied. Thus, the objective of this paper was to assess the relationship between neighborhood deprivation and nursing home staffing in the United States.

This cross-sectional study used 2018 daily payroll-based staffing records and address data for 12,609 nursing homes in the United States linked with resident assessment data. Our primary exposure of interest was severe economic deprivation at the census block group (neighborhood) level, defined as an area deprivation index score ≥85/100. The primary outcome was hours worked per resident-day among nursing home employees providing direct resident care.

FROM

LTC Focus

PUBLISHED

August 8, 2022

SOURCE

Gadbois, Emily. “Severe Neighborhood Deprivation and Nursing Home Staffing in the United States.” LTCFocus, 15 Aug. 2022, ltcfocus.org/research-findings/severe-neighborhood-deprivation-and-nursing-home-staffing-in-the-united-states.