WASHINGTON – Sen. Chuck Grassley
(R-Iowa), ranking member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, recently
pushed
for a robust federal response after reports surfaced of egregious conditions at
the Woodland Behavioral and Nursing Center in Andover, N.J. Grassley
specifically called on the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) to
detail its own review of Woodland, including decisions about whether to
terminate the facility’s participation in Medicare and Medicaid.
Last week, CMS
announced it plans to terminate Woodland Behavioral and Nursing Center from the
Medicare program effective June 25. The termination notice states that the
nursing home “no longer meets the requirements for participation as a skilled
nursing facility in the Medicare program” following “a careful review of the
facts” from surveys and on-site visits.
“The reports of abuse and awful
conditions at the Woodland nursing home were disturbing, and to make matters
worse, it seems these problems have persisted for years. I’m glad CMS has
listened to my oversight request and taken steps to investigate further, which
has now led them to terminate service. If a nursing home fails to recognize the
basic rights of its residents, then they can’t be trusted to continue caring
for patients. Families deserve to have peace of mind that their loved ones are
being cared for safely,” Grassley said.
In February, the New Jersey Department of
Health suspended admissions at Woodland after finding significant allegations
of abuse and neglect of nursing home residents at its facility. The allegations
ranged from verbal abuse to failure to respond to residents in distress. The
state also found that the facility failed to ensure staff took precautions to
prevent the spread of COVID-19.
Sadly, this is not the first time
Woodland has been exposed for egregious conduct at its facility. In 2020, police
discovered 17 bodies in a makeshift morgue which later prompted a CMS
investigation. CMS found numerous health and safety violations and ordered the
facility to develop a corrective action plan.
Grassley’s push for additional federal
oversight began after he previously
called for the Department of Justice (DOJ) to open a Civil Rights of
Institutionalized Persons Act (CRIPA) investigation into nursing homes in New
York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Michigan.
Grassley’s March letter to CMS is
available
HERE.
CMS’s notice of termination letter to
Woodland is available
HERE.
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