Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
How $900K Fresno Nursing Home Fine Was Buried From Sight
gvw_calmatters
By CalMatters
Published 3 years ago on
December 15, 2021

Share

The inspection report painted a bleak picture of life inside Northpointe Healthcare Centre in Fresno.

Jocelyn Wiener CalMatters

Jocelyn Wiener 

CalMatters

Residents grimaced in pain from bedsores. Staff told inspectors they were stretched so thin they sometimes skipped treatments and failed to distribute medications.

One resident was hospitalized with sepsis after missing four doses of an antibiotic, the report stated.

After multiple visits in early 2018, state inspectors slapped the 99-bed facility with an “immediate jeopardy” deficiency, the type reserved for the most egregious incidents in nursing homes.

Then the federal government levied a massive fine: $912,404, the largest penalty given to any California nursing home in at least a decade, according to a CalMatters analysis of federal data.

Let the Buyer Beware

For years, consumers had little way of knowing that fine even existed.

As COVID-19 ravaged nursing homes across the country — killing more than 9,300 residents in California, and sickening thousands more — elder care advocates, consumers, and policymakers have cried out for greater transparency and accountability.

“I’m terrified to get old.”Coreen Arioto, whose father was a patient at Northpointe before his death in September

But state and federal systems responsible for overseeing nursing homes often fail to publicize critical information, a CalMatters investigation has found. Government websites that promise basic information about nursing home quality can actually obscure it, lulling consumers into a false sense of security.

Licensing and ownership information available to the public can prove opaque and misleading. Fines — even massive ones like Northpointe’s — have been frequently difficult to find.

Information about nursing home quality has become so opaque at the federal level that the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services offered four alternate explanations to CalMatters for its processes — then suddenly reversed itself last week and started posting previously missing fines.

For consumers, the operating reality in California often boils down to a callous precept: Let the buyer beware.

“I’m terrified to get old,” said Coreen Arioto of Ojai, whose father was a patient at Northpointe prior to his death in September.

Despite her own training as a nurse practitioner and her husband’s work as an anesthesiologist, both were missing critical information when deciding where to place her father, she said.

Coreen Arioto, 60, in the living room of the home she shares with her mother in Ojai on Dec. 4, 2021. (CalMatters/Julie Leopo)

Northpointe Fine Omission ‘Dangerously Misleading’

In theory, plenty of safeguards exist. The state and federal governments have complementary roles in overseeing nursing homes. Every nursing home that receives federal money is routinely inspected by California’s Department of Public Health.

The state inspection teams are tasked with ensuring that facilities meet both federal and state standards; the teams also conduct complaint investigations. They are empowered to cite nursing homes for everything from abuse and neglect to dirty kitchens to breakdowns in infection control.

Often, there is plenty of give by the state in how it treats those nursing home fines — even for serious violations. As reported earlier this month by CalMatters, the state frequently settles lawsuits by facilities and winds up downgrading the violations and lowering the fines.

Despite such compromises, fines are among the most important indicators consumers have about a facility’s quality, said Tony Chicotel, staff attorney for California Advocates for Nursing Home Reform. He also lists staffing levels, ownership information, and data about COVID-19 outbreaks and vaccination rates as key indicators to check.

He characterized the Northpointe fine omission as “dangerously misleading to the public.”

“This is crucial information. It should be front and center,” he said.

Continue reading the story at this link.

About the Author

Jocelyn Wiener writes about health and mental health for CalMatters, exploring the intersection between government policies and people’s lives. To contact her: jocelyn@calmatters.org.

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

What Are Fresno Real Estate Experts Predicting for 2025 and Beyond?

DON'T MISS

First California EV Mandates Hit Automakers This Year. Most Are Not Even Close

DON'T MISS

Fresno Crash Leads to Double DUI Arrest After Passenger Grabs Wheel

DON'T MISS

Fresno Unified School Board May Change Longstanding Role Under Revised Bylaw

DON'T MISS

Fresno Unified’s New Supe Allegedly Helped Promote Her Cousin. 4 Lawsuits Claim Nepotism, Incompetence

DON'T MISS

How are Fresno County, Valley Prosecutors Using Prop 36 in Drug and Theft Cases?

DON'T MISS

49ers Agree to Contract With Free Agent Tackle D.J. Humphries

DON'T MISS

Wisconsin High Court Suspends Milwaukee Judge Accused of Helping Man Evade Immigration Authorities

DON'T MISS

Electronic Arts Lays off Hundreds, Cancels ‘Titanfall’ Game, Bloomberg News Reports

DON'T MISS

JetBlue Negotiates Partnership With United Airlines, Sources Say

DON'T MISS

George Kittle Agrees to Extension With 49ers, Becomes Highest-Paid Tight End Ever

DON'T MISS

These Fresno Women Fled the Holocaust. Watch Their Stories.

UP NEXT

Fresno Unified School Board May Change Longstanding Role Under Revised Bylaw

UP NEXT

Fresno Unified’s New Supe Allegedly Helped Promote Her Cousin. 4 Lawsuits Claim Nepotism, Incompetence

UP NEXT

How are Fresno County, Valley Prosecutors Using Prop 36 in Drug and Theft Cases?

UP NEXT

49ers Agree to Contract With Free Agent Tackle D.J. Humphries

UP NEXT

Wisconsin High Court Suspends Milwaukee Judge Accused of Helping Man Evade Immigration Authorities

UP NEXT

Electronic Arts Lays off Hundreds, Cancels ‘Titanfall’ Game, Bloomberg News Reports

UP NEXT

JetBlue Negotiates Partnership With United Airlines, Sources Say

UP NEXT

George Kittle Agrees to Extension With 49ers, Becomes Highest-Paid Tight End Ever

UP NEXT

These Fresno Women Fled the Holocaust. Watch Their Stories.

UP NEXT

California City Councilmember Charged in Hazardous Waste Transport Conspiracy

How are Fresno County, Valley Prosecutors Using Prop 36 in Drug and Theft Cases?

9 hours ago

49ers Agree to Contract With Free Agent Tackle D.J. Humphries

9 hours ago

Wisconsin High Court Suspends Milwaukee Judge Accused of Helping Man Evade Immigration Authorities

9 hours ago

Electronic Arts Lays off Hundreds, Cancels ‘Titanfall’ Game, Bloomberg News Reports

9 hours ago

JetBlue Negotiates Partnership With United Airlines, Sources Say

9 hours ago

George Kittle Agrees to Extension With 49ers, Becomes Highest-Paid Tight End Ever

9 hours ago

These Fresno Women Fled the Holocaust. Watch Their Stories.

10 hours ago

California City Councilmember Charged in Hazardous Waste Transport Conspiracy

10 hours ago

Amazon Denies Tariff Costs Display After White House Backlash

10 hours ago

Federal Judge Restricts Border Patrol Warrantless Arrests in California District

10 hours ago

Fresno Crash Leads to Double DUI Arrest After Passenger Grabs Wheel

Two people were arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence after an SUV crashed into a Fresno business near Shaw and Wishon avenue...

8 hours ago

Two people were arrested for DUI in Fresno after the passenger grabbed the wheel and helped crash an SUV into a local business. (CHP)
8 hours ago

Fresno Crash Leads to Double DUI Arrest After Passenger Grabs Wheel

8 hours ago

Fresno Unified School Board May Change Longstanding Role Under Revised Bylaw

9 hours ago

Fresno Unified’s New Supe Allegedly Helped Promote Her Cousin. 4 Lawsuits Claim Nepotism, Incompetence

9 hours ago

How are Fresno County, Valley Prosecutors Using Prop 36 in Drug and Theft Cases?

9 hours ago

49ers Agree to Contract With Free Agent Tackle D.J. Humphries

Milwaukee County Circuit Court Judge Hannah Dugan speaks during a rally marking the third anniversary of Russia's invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24, 2025, in Milwaukee, Wis. (Lee Matz/Milwaukee Independent via AP)
9 hours ago

Wisconsin High Court Suspends Milwaukee Judge Accused of Helping Man Evade Immigration Authorities

An Electronic Arts office building is shown in Los Angeles, California, U.S., July 27, 2020. (REUTERS/Mike Blake)
9 hours ago

Electronic Arts Lays off Hundreds, Cancels ‘Titanfall’ Game, Bloomberg News Reports

United Airlines planes land and prepare to take off at Newark Liberty International Airport in Newark, New Jersey, , U.S., January 27, 2025. (REUTERS/Fabrizio Bensch)
9 hours ago

JetBlue Negotiates Partnership With United Airlines, Sources Say

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend