Legal Rights of Nursing Home Residents
Nursing homes have been defined as private institutions that furnish shelter,
feeding and care for sick, aged, or infirm persons. They are not strictly
considered hospitals, in that they do not necessarily render actual medical
treatment, but may be considered hospitals for certain purposes, depending on
various statutes that may govern their operation.
Federal regulations distinguish among four types of health care facilities,
starting with those that offer the lowest level of nursing care, "adult boarding
facilities," then "residential care facilities," "intermediate care facilities,"
and finally, those that offer the highest level of nursing care -- "skilled nursing
facilities." Different standards apply depending on how an institution
is classified. State and federal governments regulate skilled nursing
facilities and intermediate care facilities, particularly with respect to their
participation in Medicare and Medicaid. National standards for nursing
homes serving as "extended care facilities" are contained in the Federal Medicare
Health Insurance Program for the Aged.
Under federal guidelines, each nursing facility must develop and implement written policies and procedures prohibiting mistreatment, neglect, or abuse of residents. A resident in such a nursing facility is entitled to receive verbal and written notice of the rights and services to which he or she is entitled during his/her stay in the facility. This notice must be give prior to or upon admission, and periodically throughout the resident's stay, in a language the resident understands. The resident must acknowledge his or her receipt of such notice in writing.
- Nursing home residents have the right to see family members, ombudspersons
or other resident advocates, physicians, service providers, and representatives
of the state and federal government.
- Residents may keep and use their personal possessions and clothing unless doing
so would endanger health and safety.
- Residents have the right to apply for and receive Medicare and Medicaid benefits
and cannot be asked to leave a home because they receive such benefits.
- A nursing home must treat all individuals the same, regardless of whether they
are private payers or Medicare or Medicaid recipients.
- Residents have the right to keep their clinical and personal records confidential.
- Residents are entitled to lists of what services are paid by Medicare and Medicaid
and the additional services for which the residents will be charged, plus the
fees for those services.
- Nursing home residents have the right to choose their own personal physician.
- Residents have the right to be fully informed about their medical care.
- Residents have the right to participate in the planning of their care and treatment.
- Nursing home residents have the right to refuse treatment.
- Residents have the right to be free from mental and physical abuse.
- Nursing home residents cannot be kept apart from other residents against their
will.
- Residents cannot be tied down or given drugs to restrain them if restraint
is not necessary to treat their medical symptoms.
- Residents have the right to raise grievances and have them resolved quickly.
- Residents may participate in social, religious, and community activities to
the extent that they do not interfere with the rights of other residents.
- Residents cannot be required to deposit their personal funds with the nursing
home, and if they request that the home manage their funds, the home must do
so according to state and federal record-keeping requirements.
- Residents have the right to privacy, including in their rooms, medical treatment,
communications, visits, and meetings with family and resident groups.
- Residents have the right to review their medical records within twenty-four
hours of making a request.
- Nursing home residents have the right to review the most recent state inspection
report relating to the home.
- Residents must be given notice before their room or roommate is changed, and
residents can refuse the transfer if the purpose is to move them from a Medicare
bed to a Medicaid bed or vice versa.
- Residents have the right to stay in the nursing home and can only be removed
if it is necessary for the resident's welfare, the resident no longer needs
the facility's services, it is necessary to prevent harm to the health or safety
of others in the facility, the resident fails to pay after reasonable notice,
or the facility ceases to operate.
- Nursing home residents and their representatives have the right to thirty
days' notice of a proposed transfer or discharge, and they have the right to
appeal.
- Before transferring residents for hospitalization or therapy, the nursing home
must inform them of the length of time that their beds will be held open for
their return, called the "bedhold period."
- Nursing home residents returning from a hospital or therapeutic leave after
expiration of the bedhold period have the right to be readmitted as soon as
the first semi-private bed becomes available.
- Residents must be informed of their rights upon admission, and must be given
their rights in writing if so requested.
More information:
Statutory Protection of Older Persons