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CMS Guidance to State Survey Agencies on Verifying Correction of Deficiencies Needs To Be Improved To Help Ensure the Health and Safety of Nursing Home Residents

State survey agencies (State agencies) must verify that nursing homes corrected identified deficiencies, such as the failure to provide necessary care and services, before certifying whether the nursing homes are in substantial compliance with Federal participation requirements for Medicare and Medicaid.

Of the nine selected State agencies in our previous reviews, seven did not always verify nursing homes' correction of deficiencies as required. Specifically, for 326 of the 700 sampled deficiencies, these State agencies did not obtain evidence of nursing homes' correction of deficiencies or maintain sufficient evidence that they have verified correction of deficiencies. For less serious deficiencies, the practice of six of the seven State agencies was to accept a nursing home's correction plan as confirmation of substantial compliance with Federal participation requirements without obtaining from the nursing home the evidence of correction of deficiencies. End of
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Further, three of the seven State agencies had technical issues with maintaining supporting documentation in the software-based system used to support the survey and certification process; as a result, they did not have sufficient evidence of correction of deficiencies. If State agencies certify that nursing homes are in substantial compliance without properly verifying the correction of deficiencies and maintaining sufficient documentation to support the verification of deficiency correction, the health and safety of nursing home residents may be placed at risk.

In addition to summarizing the issues identified during our previous reviews, we determined that the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services' (CMS's) guidance to State agencies on verifying nursing homes' correction of deficiencies and maintaining documentation to support verification needed to be improved.

To help ensure the health and safety of nursing home residents, we recommended that CMS take specific actions to (1) improve CMS's guidance to State agencies on verifying nursing homes' correction of deficiencies and maintaining documentation to support verification, (2) consider improving its forms related to the survey and certification process, and (3) work with State agencies to address technical issues with the system for maintaining supporting documentation. The "Recommendations" section in the body of the report lists our recommendations in detail.

CMS concurred with our recommendations and provided information on actions that it had taken or planned to take to address our recommendations.