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Feds sue Florida over care of children in nursing homes

By Carol Marbin Miller and Katia Savchuk, The Miami Herald
CMARBIN@MIAMIHERALD.COM
Published on Monday, July 22, 2013

 

Florida healthcare regulators have acted with “deliberate indifference to the suffering” of frail and disabled children by offering parents no “meaningful” choice but to warehouse their children in nursing homes along with elders, the U.S. Department of Justice says in a lawsuit against the state filed Monday morning.

The Justice Department’s civil rights division accused the state of violating the landmark 1990 Americans with Disabilities Act — which forbids discrimination against people with special needs — by funding and managing its community programs so poorly that hundreds of children have been forced to live — and sometimes grow up — in institutions for the elderly.

Two years ago, the Justice Department told state health administrators that Florida’s system of care for frail and disabled children was discriminatory, because it failed to offer parents meaningful opportunities to care for their medically fragile children outside large, segregated institutions. While the state made half-hearted reforms, the DOJ said, the discrimination persisted.

The Justice Department, the lawsuit says, “has determined that compliance with the ADA cannot be secured by voluntary means” by the state. The DOJ is asking a federal judge to declare the state’s program for disabled children in violation of federal law and to force the state to cease warehousing children in institutions.

“Unnecessary institutionalization denies children the full opportunity to develop and maintain bond with family and friends; impairs their ability to interact with peers without disabilities; and prevents them from experiencing many of the social and recreational activities to contribute to child development,” the lawsuit states.

It adds: “Many of the institutionalized children remain in facilities for very long periods of time, even when it is apparent that their medical conditions would permit return to the community with appropriate supports.”

The lawsuit, aimed primarily at the state’s Agency for Health Care Administration, the Department of Health and the Department of Children & Families, follows several months of in-depth reporting on the children’s plight by the Miami Herald.

The suit appears to be one of the final official acts of Thomas E. Perez, who headed the DOJ’s civil rights division until gaining Senate approval last week to be President Barack Obama’s labor secretary, an appointment that was held up for months.

To a large degree, the controversy is over money: Even as Florida health administrators have increased the payment for pediatric nursing-home beds by close to 30 percent — the state will now pay about $550 per day for a child in a nursing home — the state has relentlessly cut services for families struggling to care for a severely disabled child at home.

Reimbursement rates for service providers in the community have remained stagnant since 1987, the suit says, resulting “in shortages of nursing services in certain parts of the state.”

And three years ago, lawmakers simply cut $6 million from a program that pays for private-duty nursing care for Floridians who wish to remain outside institutions.

One program that is designed to allow parents to care for disabled children at home or in community settings now has a wait list with about 22,000 names. As of last fall, the lawsuit says, more than half of the Floridians have been waiting for care for five years or longer. Additional dollars for the program set aside by lawmakers earlier this year will only help “fewer than five percent” of those waiting.

As money for community care dwindled — and payments to nursing homes dramatically increased — the number of children living in institutions also grew, the lawsuit says. In 2011, the Agency for Health Care Administration, acting at the behest of a large Broward nursing home, withdrew its own provision limiting the number of children in each nursing home to 60. Close to 200 children remain in nursing home beds in the state.

“As a result of the state’s actions and inaction, the state has forced some families to face the cruel choice of fearing for their child’s life at home or placing their child in a nursing facility,” the DOJ said in a press release.

The state Agency for Health Care Administration declined to discuss the lawsuit Monday morning, saying it had not yet been formally served.

A Miami civil rights lawyer who has also sued the state over the institutionalization of children called health regulators’ actions since 2011 to reform the program “window dressing.”

“This is an indictment of the state of Florida with regards to how they treat children with disabilities,” said Matthew Dietz, whose suit is pending. “It means the U.S. government takes very seriously that nursing homes are not an appropriate place to put children with disabilities.”

“The suit I think will show to both the nursing home industry and to states that it is not a viable option to place a human being who could feel, who could see, who could interact into a geriatric nursing home where they have no connection with their family, with their communities,” Dietz said. “It’s an inhumane practice.”

The Justice Department began criticizing the state’s practice of segregating disabled children last September, when it sent Florida a 22-page letter claiming that it was violating the Americans with Disabilities Act by placing frail children in nursing homes for the elderly. The letter, based on a six-month investigation, said that more than 220 children had ended up in geriatric nursing homes because of state funding cuts for in-home nursing care and other services.

Late last year the Justice Department issued a confidential “settlement proposal,” which the Herald obtained, that demanded Florida stop funneling children to geriatric nursing homes, stop cutting in-home nursing care for disabled children and consult with children’s primary doctors before cutting services for them.

Florida’s practice of housing hundreds of severely disabled children in geriatric nursing homes has faced intense scrutiny after two children died in a Miami Gardens nursing home. Golden Glades Nursing & Rehabilitation Center, formerly called the Florida Club Care Center, faced fines of more than $300,000 in connection with the death of Marie Freyre, a severely disabled 14-year old. As the Herald chronicled in a series of stories, Freyre died on April 2011 hours after being admitted to the home when staff failed to give her anti-seizure medication. Golden Glades shut down its pediatric wing earlier this year.

Bryan Louzada died in the same facility in July 2010, a year after his mother was forced to deposit him there when state health administrators repeatedly refused to pay enough for in-home nursing care.

Another nursing home, Lakeshore Villas in Tampa, which had been the subject of extensive reporting in the Herald, also is shutting its doors after the federal Medicaid and Medicare programs announced they would no longer reimburse for care in that facility.

A total of five children have died in Florida nursing homes during the last half of 2010 — and 130 have died since January 2006, according to state records. Medically fragile children who live with parents or in a community setting die in far lower numbers, records show.

 

 

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Alexia Nechayev

FYS Events & Meeting Chair
(Palm Beach)

Hello, My name is Alexia Nechayev. I am 25 years old and I am an alumna of Florida International University where I received my B.A. in Psychology. My future career goal is to be a Lawyer. I was in care for about one year from age 17 to 18. Prior to entering care, I only knew about the negative stigma regarding foster care and while in care that narrative was unfortunately my experience.

In school I felt like I was on display because my status in care was broadcast to other students and in my placement behavior was leveraged for “privileges” that should be a natural right of all children. Because I did not know my rights I did not know that what I was experiencing was wrong. Today this is exactly why I advocate, because I don’t want this to be the same for other youth who are experiencing foster care.

This is my second year on the FYS Statewide Board and I’m happy to be the Events and Meetings Chair this year because my main goal through advocacy is to reach as many people as possible. My favorite thing as a board member is to see how comfortable members become while working together. The community needs to know that youth in foster care are real people, going through some of the hardest moments of their life and youth need to know that their voice is powerful. I believe that we have to speak up and bring these issues to people’s attention so that they do not forget us. Advocacy, education and consistency is the only way.

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