The U.S. hospice industry is booming. Government data shows that in 2014, nearly half of all Medicare patients who die will do so as a hospice patient -- twice as many as a decade ago. Medicare will spend $15 billion on hospice care this year, four times more than in 2000, according to the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission.
Hospice, in short, isn't a niche health service anymore. Yet government regulators still treat it as such, consistently rating it as a lower priority for inspection than traditional health facilities. A Huffington Post investigation found that the average hospice hasn't been certified -- meaning fully inspected -- in 4 ½ years. HuffPost identified 866 hospices that haven't been certified in more than six years. (Nursing homes, by contrast, must be inspected under federal law every 15 months).
These inspections, typically conducted by state health departments, are intended to make sure hospices are doing all they can to promote patient health and safety. (Other forms of spot inspections, usually responding to a specific complaint, may happen more often.)
Though it is not unusual for a health care provider in any field to make mistakes that could lead to a violation, HuffPost identified nearly 400 hospice facilities that have racked up 20 or more violations over the past decade.
The information presented in this map reflects Huffington Posts's June 19, 2014, calculations of recent Medicare data. Some surveys and data points provided by The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services may be missing or out of date, because the regulator is not legally required to validate each entry.
Source: The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services
Map tiles by Stamen Design, under CC BY 3.0
Map data by OpenStreetMap, licensed under CC BY SA
Hospice, in short, isn't a niche health service anymore. Yet government regulators still treat it as such, consistently rating it as a lower priority for inspection than traditional health facilities. A Huffington Post investigation found that the average hospice hasn't been certified -- meaning fully inspected -- in 4 ½ years. HuffPost identified 866 hospices that haven't been certified in more than six years. (Nursing homes, by contrast, must be inspected under federal law every 15 months).
These inspections, typically conducted by state health departments, are intended to make sure hospices are doing all they can to promote patient health and safety. (Other forms of spot inspections, usually responding to a specific complaint, may happen more often.)
Though it is not unusual for a health care provider in any field to make mistakes that could lead to a violation, HuffPost identified nearly 400 hospice facilities that have racked up 20 or more violations over the past decade.
The United States Of Uninspected Hospices
The information presented in this map reflects Huffington Posts's June 19, 2014, calculations of recent Medicare data. Some surveys and data points provided by The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services may be missing or out of date, because the regulator is not legally required to validate each entry.
Source: The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services
Map tiles by Stamen Design, under CC BY 3.0
Map data by OpenStreetMap, licensed under CC BY SA
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