Tuesday, December 20, 2022
Congress and Industry Leaders Call for Crackdown on Hospice Fraud — ProPublica
Studies have found that for-profit hospices are more likely than their nonprofit counterparts to have less skilled staff, reduced clinical services and fewer home visits in the last days of life. Their patients have longer stays and leave hospice alive at higher rates. Last year, citing the research, three members of the Senate Finance Committee requested information on the quality of hospice services provided by Kindred at Home, the country's largest home care chain. (Kindred's hospice subsidiary was recently spun-off and sold to a private equity firm.) "We are concerned that when applied to hospice care, the private equity model of generating profit on a rapid turnaround can occur at the expense of dying patients and their families," they wrote. Analysis of the data is ongoing, senate staffers said...
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment