Long-Term
Solutions for Long-Term Care
Social Work Today
By David Surface
Vol. 4 No. 5 p. 22
Quality care begins with education and awareness.
Staff training and development programs are making a difference at
all levels in long-term care.
Recent news stories of negligence in our nation’s
nursing homes have spotlighted the long-term care industry and turned
quality improvement from an abstract concept into an urgent necessity.
While some look to the government for better monitoring
of long-term care facilities, more substantive ideas for rehabilitating
the long-term care industry are coming from social workers on the
front lines.
Long-Term Care Lags in Staff Development
In any industry, the importance of staff training and development
may seem like a no-brainer—if you want your organization to
thrive and provide excellent service, you train and develop your staff.
But in many long-term care settings, staff training and development
seems to be a foreign concept.
According to Carol J. Grubba, MSN, RN, C, education
director of the Michigan Public Health Institute (MPHI) Center for
Long Term Care (CLTC), the long-term care industry is far behind other
healthcare sectors in terms of staff development.
“When I first started, it was evident that the
staff in long-term care did not have the knowledge base, first in
gerontology, to really be able to adequately assess and plan for a
geriatric person,” says Grubba. “Standards of practice
and standards of care were not adhered to in all cases. The industry
has been slow to pick up on that. The OBRA [Omnibus Budget Reconciliation
Act] federal regulations in 1987 are what gave the impetus to change.”
For Sheldon Lewin, LCSW, MBA, director of staff development
and training at Glenview Terrace Nursing Center, Illinois, his early
impressions of the long-term care industry were similar to Grubba’s.
Lewin began his career as a social worker in long-term
care 15 years ago. “I could see there was a need back then,”
says Lewin. “At the first nursing facility where I set up a
social services department, the CNAs [certified nurse assistants]
all lacked basic customer service skills, such as how to introduce
yourself to a patient and family. A simple thing like eye contact
is immensely important—if you introduce yourself to a patient
or family without looking them in the eye, they think you’ve
got something to hide. You may lose credibility. These really basic
skills just weren’t there.”
Is It All About Money?
Lewin points out the grim financial realities behind the lack of staff
development in the long-term care industry.
“Training and development is costly,”
says Lewin. “One video can cost $500. These facilities are underfunded.
Many of the customers are on public aid. It used to be that more residents
paid privately, but that’s now virtually nonexistent. The reimbursement
rates from the government are very low. You barely have money to hire
your nursing staff, let alone someone specially hired to do training.”
MaryAnne Benedict, MSN, RN, chairperson, advisory
committee of the New England School of Whole Health Education (NESWHE),
explains how lack of funding combined with overworked staff has led
to the current situation. “What happens is that the number of
hours required for staff to care for the long-term care population
and the intensity of those hours frequently doesn’t allow for
opportunities for staff development because we need the caregivers
at the bedside,” says Benedict. “To take them away from
the bedside to do any sort of formal development, there’s no
budget for that.”
But for Carl A. Gibson, PhD, program director of the
MPHI CLTC, there are factors other than funding that may be equally
important.
“The industry as a whole is very quality-focused
but often believes they don’t have enough resources to develop
quality staff,” says Gibson. As for what’s behind the
lack of staff development, “The industry would say that it’s
financial resources—I’d say just resources, including
effective administration and management, collaboration with other
providers within the community. It’s not just having enough
dollars.”
Grubba believes the administration of long-term care
facilities have other resources at their disposal for developing staff,
even when funding is low.
“How management supports and respects the staff
is a big issue in long-term care,” says Grubba. “It’s
difficult work for the caregivers and burnout is high. But even though
the financial benefits aren’t tremendous, research shows that
there are other factors that come into play. The good homes respect
and support the staff in different ways, basically by respecting them
as a people, involving them in management issues, rewarding them in
positive ways so they’ll respect who they’re working for.”
Grubba cites a LEAP (Learn, Empower, Achieve, and
Produce) training program in Michigan recently sponsored by the CLTC.
“The purpose of the LEAP program is to develop and train nursing
staff in long-term care and is an example of how management can show
staff that they are supported and valued,” says Grubba. “Organizations
that have implemented LEAP training have reduced costs by significantly
decreasing turnover; improved relationships and communication among
nursing staff, residents, and families; and increased job satisfaction
and work productivity through team building.”
Gibson points to the results of a recent survey of
more than 800 direct care staff in Michigan. “Among some of
the reasons they’d left their facilities, pay was an issue,
but also having too many patients, not being valued by administration
and supervisors, lack of opportunity to advance—all these rated
almost equally.”
Grubba has seen how effective these other measures
can be. “I’ve been in homes in downtown Detroit where
the Medicaid reimbursement is low but the staff commitment is high
and the care that is given to residents is quality care.”
Why Government Cures Are Not Enough
While most people will agree that government has a responsibility
to monitor long-term care facilities for quality and safety, those
who have seen these government interventions firsthand are all too
aware of their shortcomings.
“I’d have to say that the Illinois Department
of Public Health inspections are helpful, but they’re only seeing
a bird’s-eye view of one moment of care or service,” says
Lewin. “They’re here only a couple of days—that
doesn’t give them an opportunity to see real patient care and
service issues over an extended period of time.”
Gibson agrees with Lewin’s critique of government
monitoring of the long-term care industry. “About a month after
the initial survey, the facility will be resurveyed,” says Gibson.
“That’s not enough time to fix all the systems and put
in effective monitoring. That creates a cyclical yo-yo effect in which
the same problems continue to arise.”
Long-term care staff may sometimes be resistant to
quality improvement measures prescribed by the state. “These
things are sometimes viewed with disdain,” says Gibson. “There’s
more paperwork involved, and compliance issues are often hard for
facilities and staff to understand if they’re not part of the
process. When they fail, they don’t know why, they don’t
know the principals behind what they’re being asked to do.”
Grubba believes the way out of this cycle of failure
is by providing long-term care facilities with the real tools they
need for improvement and self-monitoring. “The management at
these facilities get requirements, but they don’t know how to
implement them,” says Grubba. “They need to update and
enhance their skills. If you want to have quality of care that’s
not simply dependent on one individual but that’s systemic and
continuous, you have to have it come from the top down. You have to
have adequate, competent management.”
Some Solutions
To provide long-term care facilities with the ongoing staff development
and training they were lacking, Lewin created the People First program.
“When I came to Glenview Terrace Nursing Center,
they had gone through a four-year renovation, several leadership changes,
and staff resignations resulting in low employee morale and motivation—all
of this affecting customer service,” Lewin says.
Lewin completed thorough organizational and cultural
assessments and department and service audits; interviewed employees
and management; and conducted focus groups with residents, patients,
families, and visitors. The program that was the culmination of that
research, People First, was intended to develop customer service,
provide training, and improve morale and motivation among the staff.
Among the program’s components are sensitizing
staff to resident/patient concerns, developing communication and teamwork,
and coordinating uniforms for direct care, operations, and customer
service staff.
Why don’t more long-term care facilities enact
staff development programs such as People First? According to Lewin,
it takes a combination of variables. “In my case, I found an
owner who’s not only a visionary but a brilliant businessman,”
says Lewin. “He has a major competitive advantage within this
industry—a full-time training director and department. This
is virtually nonexistent in the Chicago area. It really takes someone
with a vision, who has resources and is willing to invest time and
money. Many private owners in long-term care would rather keep the
profit to themselves, getting by with basic in-services. A program
such as ours takes commitment, the right energy, and people.”
The MPHI CLTC was created by the bureau of health
systems as part of the Resident Protection Initiative in 1997 as an
alternative to the state enforcement processes that were in place.
“The traditional remedies are punitive,”
Gibson explains. “Civil money penalties and fines, like denial
of payments for new admissions—it’s almost like a traffic
ticket.”
“Our program was to give help and resources
to facilities with education and support from advisors,” says
Grubba. “It was not meant to be punitive, like the state’s
civil money penalties and fines, but more remedial and collaborative.
“When a facility has a survey and are found
deficient in any practice, they’re required to turn in a plan
of correction to the state,” continues Grubba. “When they’re
found to be in significant need, a directed plan of correction is
enforced. It’s more detailed than a regular plan. We come in
and work with the facility staff. We include the quality assurance
and monitoring part, which is typically weak in the first place.
“Along with that, or as a stand-alone measure,
the licensing officer may order a directed in-service training on
a number of issues, such as assessment, urinary incontinence, dementia,
a variety of clinical issues,” says Grubba. “We go in
and train the facility managing staff and ask them to take on the
responsibility of training the rest of the staff. These are all multiple
visits—we try to come back in and assist.”
“We can provide a continuing service,”
says Gibson. “Our focus is to educate the management staff in
the nursing homes so they can provide the mentoring.”
The NESWHE takes an aggressively holistic approach
to staff development. “No. 1, we need to develop the staff of
long-term care facilities—all staff,” says Benedict. “What
we have at the New England School of Whole Health Education is a Whole
Person Care program, which is a model of staff education and is meant
for integration into all aspects of a long-term care facility. We
also offer in-person and distance learning-based educational programs
for social workers. Our programs consist of a relationship-centered
curriculum, which integrates current scientific and medical research,
with the wisdom of various spiritual teachings and a natural outlook
on healing. It combines one-to-one equity-based mindful listening
with respectful, compassionate presence, which is critical to the
success of a long-term care facility.”
Benedict understands that the kind of changes advocated
by the NESWHE may take time to be widely accepted. “The whole
idea of a culture change within an institution or organization is
the ultimate goal. That’s not an easy thing to do,” she
says.
Is There an Increased Interest in Long-Term Care
Quality?
Gibson points to changes in federal regulations in 1989 as the turning
point in quality of care for the long-term care industry. “For
about four or five years, there was a steady, gradual increase in
the quality of care—decreased use of restraints and certain
meds. Then there was a period of time when things were at a standoff.
After people became proficient with the new federal requirements and
the new quality indicators, there was a focus on what the quality
indicators really meant, how to measure them and attain good numbers.
Now there is much more focus on quality.”
How widespread is interest in quality and staff development
among long-term care facilities today? “I would have to say
that it depends on the individual ownership,” says Lewin. “Most
long-term care facilities are privately owned, so it depends on the
owners in terms of what they see as being important. There is no training
program like this in the Midwest, nothing that addresses all levels
of staff and management. When we teach sensitivity training at our
facility, it is a lesson no less significant for dietary, housekeeping,
and maintenance than it is for our nursing and management staff.
“Training and development is a relatively new
concept to this industry,” continues Lewin. “One other
facility in Illinois, Mather Pavilion, does the LEAP program, which
focuses primarily on training nursing staff—we train all 300
of our employees and do this consistently every month. Our curriculum
includes specialized long-term management training, customer service,
and patient care training.”
The CLTC at MPHI sponsors an annual two-day training
specific to issues in long-term care for all interdisciplinary team
members. “The focus of this training is to offer clinical information
on a variety of topics, updates on standards of practice and standards
of care, and tools and resources to expand the team member’s
gerontological knowledge base,” says Grubba.
“Certainly there’s an increased interest,”
says Benedict. “If nothing else, the media has helped create
that with articles and exposes written on some of these issues.”
Benedict predicts more interest in quality of care for the future.
“What’s happened is that as we see our population aging,
people are understanding that we’re going to need more staff,
more healthcare providers who are able to care for those patients
as they age and have chronic illnesses because our lives are much
longer.”
— David Surface is a freelance writer and
editor based in Brooklyn, NY.
New Career Direction for Social Workers?
Sheldon Lewin, LCSW, MBA, director of staff development
and training at Glenview Terrace Nursing Center, believes there’s
a real role for social workers today to address issues around training
of healthcare professionals.
“Social workers need to reposition themselves
in today’s job market,” says Lewin. “The days of
traditional social work counseling in healthcare organizations is
changing. I’d recommend that if social workers are interested
in getting into this area, there may be growing opportunities for
them to present ideas about training to long-term care and other healthcare
organizations. Social workers, because of their background and experience,
may have the needed skill set to thrive in the area of training and
development or more broadly human resources.”
However, Lewin cautions social workers considering
going into training consultancy to focus on areas in which they have
experience. “Any social worker who’s planning to go into
the area of training and development of human resources should first
make certain they have ripe experience in the area they want to train
in or they won’t have the credibility they need to be taken
seriously. If I came into Glenview Terrace and tried to put together
a corporate training program and talk about emotional intelligence,
situational leadership, and other abstract concepts, I’d be
laughed right out of the boardroom. Our training is practical, basic,
and vital.”
Lewin clearly enjoys his role as consultant to the
long-term care industry. But does he miss working with clients? “I
feel accomplished after a day’s work because I know I’m
making a difference. I may not be working directly with clients anymore,
but I’m working with the people who take care of the clients
and they too need attention. In addition, I like being able to put
my knowledge to work in the classroom setting.”
Lewin notes that some of the things he teaches need
to be retaught in acute care. Then does he have plans for branching
out into the acute care industry? “Probably not. Actually, I’ll
be rolling out this program to three other facilities in our network.
My passion has always been in the long-term care industry.”
— DS
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