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    North Dakota joins 20-state coalition to fight nursing home rule change

    By Edward Segal,

    14 hours ago

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=272xa8_0w41Rg6z00

    BISMARCK, ND ( KXNET ) — North Dakota Attorney General Drew Wrigley has joined a coalition seeking to stop a Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services (CMS) rule by the Biden-Harris administration that he says would cost states hundreds of thousands of dollars and drive nursing homes out of business. The states in the coalition are suing to try and stop this new rule.

    “Twenty states have banded together to push back and hopefully defeat the Biden-Harris Administration’s poorly planned overreach that will weaken care and ultimately restrict patient access when nursing care facilities are forced to close, especially in rural areas,” Wrigley said.

    With the full support of Gov. Doug Burgum, the Peace Garden State joined the 20-state coalition, which is led by Kansas Attorney General Kris Kobach, Iowa Attorney General Brenna Bird and South Carolina Attorney General Alan Wilson.

    Currently, nursing homes are required by Congress to provide eight hours of continuous staffing per day. The new rule would increase the continuous staffing rule to 24 hours per day. It would also require a nursing staff ratio that 97% of nursing homes would be out of compliance with.

    Burgum released a statement about the consequences he thinks this rule would have.

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    “This new CMS rule will have a devastating impact on access to nursing homes and have unintended consequences to hospitals by impairing their ability to discharge patients into rehab and long-term care facilities,” Burgum said. “…Federal rules like this that fail to acknowledge the unique needs of North Dakota and other rural states will only worsen the workforce gaps in a nursing profession that is already experiencing a massive shortage following the pandemic.”

    The coalition of attorneys general argues that the new rule exceeds CMS’s authority and sidesteps Congress.

    “This final rule poses an existential threat to the nursing home industry as many nursing homes that are already struggling will have no choice but to go out of business. And the main victims will be patients who have nowhere else to go,” the complaint reads. “…The final rule represents another attempt from the Biden-Harris administration to impose its policy preferences on the rest of the country, but is monumentally costly and nearly impossible to comply with.”

    In addition to the 20-state coalition, LeadingAge affiliates from 17 states are also joining the lawsuit. LeadingAge is an organization with numerous nursing home members.

    You can read the full complaint here.

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    Comments / 1
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    Donna Nevins
    3h ago
    I think more staff needs to be on all shifts. second shift has a nurse and 2 cna . That is not enough to give the care each patient requires. the rush to put patients to bed with no extra care. The cost to the patient is horrible. my mother's care double and the care was less. There should be a cap on how much is charged to the patient.
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