4.6 Article

Severe neighborhood deprivation and nursing home staffing in the United States

Journal

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jgs.17990

Keywords

disparities; neighborhood disadvantage; nursing homes

Funding

  1. National Institute on Aging [K76AG074922, K76AG074926, P30AG028747]
  2. Patrick and Catherine Weldon Donaghue Medical Research Foundation

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This study found significant staffing disparities within nursing homes located in severely deprived neighborhoods in the United States. Furthermore, for physical therapists and occupational therapists, nurses, and registered nurses, the staffing ratios were lower in facilities in more deprived areas compared to those in less deprived areas, indicating the need for targeted interventions to improve staffing levels in deprived neighborhoods.
Background Low nursing home staffing in the United States is a growing safety concern. Socioeconomic deprivation in the local areas surrounding a nursing home may be a barrier to improving staffing rates but has been poorly studied. Thus, the objective of this paper was to assess the relationship between neighborhood deprivation and nursing home staffing in the United States. Methods This cross-sectional study used 2018 daily payroll-based staffing records and address data for 12,609 nursing homes in the United States linked with resident assessment data. Our primary exposure of interest was severe economic deprivation at the census block group (neighborhood) level, defined as an area deprivation index score >= 85/100. The primary outcome was hours worked per resident-day among nursing home employees providing direct resident care. Marginal linear regression models and generalized estimating equations with robust sandwich-type standard errors were used to estimate associations between severe neighborhood deprivation and staffing rates. Results Compared to less deprived neighborhoods, unadjusted staffing rates in facilities located within severely deprived neighborhoods were 38% lower for physical and occupational therapists, 30% lower for registered nurses (RNs), and 5% lower for certified nursing assistants. No disparities in licensed practical nurse (LPN) staffing were observed. In models with state-level and rurality fixed effects and clustered on the county, a similar pattern of disparities was observed. Specifically, RN staffing per 100 resident-days was significantly lower in facilities located within severely deprived neighborhoods as compared to those in less deprived areas (mean difference: 5.6 fewer hours, 95% confidence interval [CI] 4.2-6.9). Disparities of lower magnitude were observed for other clinical disciplines except for LPNs. Conclusions Significant staffing disparities were observed within facilities located in severely deprived neighborhoods. Targeted interventions, including workforce recruitment and retention efforts, may be needed to improve staffing levels for nursing homes in deprived neighborhoods.

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