When Hawaii lawmakers decided聽last year to require unannounced inspections of state-licensed care facilities for the elderly and disabled聽鈥 a policy most states adopted years ago to hold the growing industry more accountable 鈥 they also chose聽to delay聽doing so until July 1, 2019.

Rep. Della Au Belatti, who inserted the last-minute amendment, said it was necessary聽to first gain聽a better sense of health inspectors鈥 workload and understand the outcome of the unannounced visits and inspections they conduct.

罢丑别听 required unannounced inspections of medical marijuana dispensaries to start almost immediately.

The amended bill聽included a provision requiring聽the Department of Health to submit annual reports about the聽inspections it does for the聽roughly聽1,700 care facilities it oversees.

Dept of Health Keith Ridley listens as Sen Thielen questions him in Capitol Room 16 on care home reports being made public with up to 2 month delay.
Keith Ridley, who heads the Department of Health’s Office of Health Care Assurance, which oversees long-term care facilities, provided the first of three annual reports about its inspections. Cory Lum/Civil Beat

The 聽was filed earlier this month with the Legislature. It was all of four pages, including a cover page, a blank page and a page citing the law that set out everything the report was legally required to聽have in it.

State long-term care ombudsman John McDermott called the department鈥檚 report 鈥渢errible,鈥 questioning how the information it contained would justify聽the decision to not change the policy immediately.

鈥淲hy it takes three years to do this is a mystery,鈥 McDermott said.

Specifically, the report was to include: the annual aggregate numbers of announced and unannounced visits conducted by the department; the annual aggregate numbers of unannounced inspections as follow-up visits, visits to confirm corrections or deficiencies, or visits to investigate complaints or suspicions of abuse or neglect; and the general outcomes and corrective actions taken by the department as a result of the visits and investigations.

The report answers the first part in a table that shows 350 of the 2,154 inspections and visits last year were unannounced, about 16 percent. There were 67 unannounced inspections of nursing homes, which is聽required by federal law for Medicare and Medicaid certified facilities.

It ignores the second requirement for a breakdown of why the visits and inspections were made. And it provides a single sentence to address the third requirement about general outcomes and corrective actions:

鈥淥verall, most inspections result in citations for non-compliance with regulations and all citations are required to be corrected by the facility before the facility receives their renewed license or certification,鈥 the report states.

McDermott said聽he was concerned that “most” inspections, even announced, result in citations.

“That’s not good,” he said.

Sen. Roz Baker, right, and Rep. Della Au Belatti worked on a bill to mandate unannounced inspections during a conference committee meeting last year. Nathan Eagle/Civil Beat

Belatti did not respond to requests for comment about the report. Neither did聽Keith Ridley, who heads the department’s , with oversees the care facilities.

A department spokeswoman also did not respond.

Belatti has said that 鈥渆veryone is concerned about patient safety鈥 and that鈥檚 why she worked so hard to get the amendment聽in the bill delaying the requirement for unannounced inspections. She negotiated the final version in April with Sen. Roz Baker, who also did not respond to requests for comment.

鈥淚f they are understaffed, it will become very clear to us because of the number of inspections that they are doing,鈥 Belatti said in an interview after the full House voted to pass the bill last year.

Ridley has said he wants unannounced inspections and his boss, Health Department Director Virginia Pressler, has called聽them聽a 鈥済ood idea.鈥

To health inspectors, 鈥渧isits鈥 are different from 鈥渋nspections.鈥 Inspections can last for several hours, and surveyors file written reports on the conditions they find that become publicly available. Visits are typically much shorter, sometimes lasting half an hour or less.

Lilia Fajotina, who heads a group of care home operators. 94-438 Hoaeae St. 7feb2015. photograph Cory Lum/Civil Beat
This care home in Waipahu is run by Lilia Fajotina, who heads a group of care home operators. Cory Lum/Civil Beat

Some care home operators have said they are fine with the state doing unannounced visits, but for decades industry groups have fought moves to require unannounced inspections as part of the licensing or certification process.

In testimony on bills before the Legislature, industry groups representing the care facilities have said the operators need to know when the inspectors are coming so they can get their paperwork in order to make sure they are home with their clients and not out running errands, such as picking up medicine or taking someone to the doctor. They鈥檝e also cited privacy concerns.

But critics have maintained that an unannounced inspection is the only way to get an honest snapshot of how the facility is running. They say when the operators know the inspectors are coming, they are able to quickly shore up any deficiencies in preparation for the visit.

Richard Mallot, executive director of the New York-based Long Term Care Community Coalition, has said announced inspections are “just an empty shell when it comes to accountability.”

Read the full report below:

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