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Personal Care Services

Who else do you know that has been assaulted by one personal care attendant and threatened (as recently as an hour ago) by another?  None of this had anything to do with work.  I could tell you stories for days but I want this uploaded to the internet soon in case I unexpectedly die.  I want you to read it so that you can look a little harder at the personal care attendants taking care of your patients.

Let me start by saying that some of the most wonderful caregivers in the world are PCA’s.  They have saved more lives than we’ll ever know simply by alleviating loneliness, keeping our elderly safe in the home and making sure they are properly nourished.  You couldn’t count the number of broken hips, bedsores, falls, infections and accidents they have prevented.  A personal care attendant can prevent nursing home placement which many elderly people fear and become part of the family.  The majority of PCA’s are give more than they take.

There are other personal care attendants and companies who are no more useful to society than your run of the mill crack whore.  Consider the following cases:

  • Numerous indictments have been obtained because personal care assistants continued to bill for patients who had moved out-of-state
  • Countless hours have been billed fraudulently.  Many times, the PCA’s do not meet minimum employment standards.
  • Others continued to bill when patients were in hospitals and nursing homes.
  • A PCA boyfriend billed for providing personal care to his girlfriend while she was in jail.  The girlfriend got mad and turned her boyfriend in when he would not use the fraudulently obtained Medicaid money for bail her out of jail.
  • According to an indictment which has not gone to court yet, a beneficiary got out of jail for a one day furlough to meet with his case worker at home so he could continue receiving Personal Care Services. Allegedly, he was approved for the services and then returned to jail while Medicaid continued to foot the bill.
  • A personal care attendant admitted to forging  a personal check in the amount $10,000.00 from her patient’s personal checking account.  She then deposited it into her mother’s account.  The check did not clear.  This is almost forgivable.  There must be a diagnosis that prevented her from understanding how bank checks worked.
  • A New York provider will be paying back over 2M because they billed for services not rendered and inflated hours on billing.

This paints a pretty bleak picture of the personal care industry.  Keep in mind that there are no OIG press releases about legitimate companies who provide excellent care.

What can you do?

  • If you are discharging your patient to PCS services after skilled care is no longer needed, try to overlap a week or so if your state allows it.  You can spend some time training the PCS on the proper way to care for your patient’s unique needs.
  • If your patient has personal care services established when you admit the patient, check up on them.  In the situations where I have been threatened it was because a friend who was afraid to talk to the aide was eager to talk to me.  Ask direct questions about the quality of care and the level of satisfaction.  Pay attention to both what the patient says and doesn’t say.
  • Ask to view the home folder.  Call the PCS company and speak with the RN responsible for creating and overseeing the plan of care for the home worker.  To coordinate care, there should be a copy of the most recent care plan in the home.
  • Review the home folder for accurate contact and grievance information.  Verify the phone numbers and the name of the owner/Director of Nursing.  Write the number in large print for your patient to see.
  • If you frequently find your patient alone, ask about the home worker’s hours and care plan.  Check the time sheets if they are kept in the home binder.

The OIG looks a lot at the dollars spent on fraudulent visits.  Medicaid costs for personal care services in 2011 totaled $12.7 billion, a thirty five percent increase since 2005. The U.S. Department of Labor projects that the employment of personal assistants and home health care workers will grow by 46 percent by 2018.

We should look more at the care given to our patients.  In most cases, people who are willing to commit fraud are not overly committed to the wellbeing of their patients.  There is no shortage of personal care attendants looking for work and some of them are very competent and dedicated to their patients.

If you’re thinking this is not your job, I beg to differ.  You have a responsibility to ensure that caregivers, paid or unpaid, are responsible and capable.  Remember you are a mandated reporter of abuse and neglect.  Coordination of care is a Condition of Participation for all Medicare Providers.  More importantly, it is one of the underlying principles of sound clinical practice.

The last threatening phone call I got was a little while ago.  If this ends up being the last post I write, it was good knowing you but don’t lose any sleep fretting about me.  I am too stupid to be afraid and that tends to confuse people who mean to harm me.

2 Comments Post a comment
  1. Goldie #

    Julianne
    I agree with some of the info on this blog however, any PCA/DSW’s working the Medicaid cases in LA fall under Health Standards who have imposed strict guideline that Provders must adhere to. Yes, there are some Providers who bill Medicaid for services not provided but hopefully these guys will be caught. I believe that at least 6M was recovered last year due to fraud. I know that there are a lot of Providers turning in their Licenses because they can’t keep up with the new regs nor can they afford to pay for the required training that went into effect 12/20/13 for Waiver Recipients who recieve medication administration. I am sickened everytime I read where some sitter PCA, DSW, CNA, etc has been arrested for abuse, theft, etc.
    I am the Director of Client Services for Nursing PRN and we do everything humanly possible to provide the needed services to our Clients. I personally assess all of our Private Duty Clients and aline them with the worker that I feel can best meet their needs. However, our Employees know that I may show up anytime day or night to check on them. I am required by Health Standards who oversees the HCBS Program to make unannounced visits on our DSW’s at least every 60 days.
    Sorry to rant but there re some good Providers out here. Call me if you want to discuss.
    Goldie

    February 12, 2014

    • Goldie,

      Good to know you know so much about this. I know it is a tough business to run but I think what many providers and businesses in general don’t get is that there is a world of difference between being conservative with their expenditures and being cheap and taking short cuts. Turn around is is expensive.

      Email me your phone number. Just repel to Email you got. My friend will be looking for replacement soon.

      And it’s good to hear from you in general.

      February 12, 2014

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