Prosecuting COVID-19 Fraud, Pharmacy Deserts and Spotting The Early Signs Of Dementia, This West Virginia Week

This week we heard about prosecutors on the trail of illegally obtained COVID-19 relief funds and communities grappling with the loss of pharmacies

This week we heard about prosecutors on the trail of illegally obtained COVID-19 relief funds and communities grappling with the loss of pharmacies

We also learned some of the early warning signs of dementia to look out for this holiday season.

We also heard more on the state’s mail processing center’s future, as well as stories about a 911 service outage and a nursing shortage.

Chris Schulz is our host this week. Our theme music is by Matt Jackfert.

West Virginia Week is a web-only podcast that explores the week’s biggest news in the Mountain State. It’s produced with help from Bill Lynch, Briana Heaney, Caroline MacGregor, Chris Schulz, Curtis Tate, Emily Rice, Eric Douglas, Liz McCormick, and Randy Yohe.

Learn more about West Virginia Week.

Health Care Staffing Shortages And State House Of Delegates Sees Renovations, This West Virginia Morning

On this West Virginia Morning, staffing shortages place an immense strain on the entire health care system. They leave hospitals and medical centers overwhelmed and unable to provide optimal care for patients. Appalachia Health News Reporter Emily Rice continues our radio series. “Help Wanted: Understanding West Virginia’s Labor Force.”

On this West Virginia Morning, staffing shortages place an immense strain on the entire health care system. They leave hospitals and medical centers overwhelmed and unable to provide optimal care for patients. Appalachia Health News Reporter Emily Rice continues our radio series. “Help Wanted: Understanding West Virginia’s Labor Force.”

Also, in this show, the House of Delegates chamber has turned from a historic room of legislative decision making, to a renovation worksite, where the decisions are on paint swatches and desk stains. Randy Yohe has the story.

West Virginia Morning is a production of West Virginia Public Broadcasting which is solely responsible for its content.

Support for our news bureaus comes from Concord University and Shepherd University.

Caroline MacGregor is our assistant news director and produced this episode.

Listen to West Virginia Morning weekdays at 7:43 a.m. on WVPB Radio or subscribe to the podcast and never miss an episode. #WVMorning

Nursing Shortages Limit Timely Care In W.Va.

Nursing had the highest overall rates of vacancies and turnovers of all the professions studied in a hospital workforce report.

Nursing is a critical hospital workforce that saw shortages prior to 2020, according to the West Virginia Hospital Association’s workforce report. It also tends to receive the most attention as the largest workforce in the hospital.

Nursing had the highest overall rates of vacancies and turnovers of all the professions studied in the report with nursing assistants having the single highest turnover rate. In West Virginia, nursing professions have a vacancy rate of 19.3 percent and a turnover rate of 26.3 percent. 

During the pandemic, the topic of travel nurses and other roaming hospital staff became common in everyday life. According to experts, traveling nurses have been an integral part of health care for a long time.

Annette Ferguson, director for the School of Nursing at Marshall University, said training for traveling nurses is the same as training for stationary nurses.

“Typically, with a traveler, they have to, of course, have the same training, they have to be licensed, they have to have a degree. A lot of times in the past, they had to at least have at least a couple years experience working at the bedside,” Ferguson said.

Jim Kaufman, president of the West Virginia Hospital Association, said hospitals nationwide have used temporary staff during times of particular need. 

“You may see a surge in flu in one part of the country, they may need additional staff that was not uncommon,” Kaufman said. “During the pandemic, you really saw a huge increase in the demand for traveling staff.”

The problem, according to Kaufman, is that the salaries for those nurses skyrocketed, putting more pressure on hospitals to retain staff that might be seeking other opportunities, putting the hospital in the position to hire traveling or outside staff. 

“And then, because [West Virginia hospitals] were using travelers as well, that cost went up significantly,” Kaufman said. “You’re seeing that significantly ease now that the pandemic’s over and the demand for travelers has significantly come down.”

Dr. Clay Marsh, West Virginia University’s Chancellor and Executive Dean of Health Sciences, agreed, noting some hospitals hired back their own staff as traveling nurses, at a higher rate when agencies stepped in.

“Because of the acute shortage of care providers to be able to keep all the hospital units open and operating, and particularly because of the severity of illness, then hospitals really had no choice but to hire a number of these travelers, even if some of the travelers previously were members of the hospital staff, and they had to rehire them back at much higher prices,” Marsh said.

Now that acute need is reduced with people being vaccinated against COVID-19, leading to less severe cases and hospitalizations, Marsh said the nursing industry looks similar to pre-pandemic openings and hiring needs.

“While the numbers need to be refilled and equilibrated back to what we saw before the pandemic, the acute requirement for nurses to serve in crisis kind of situations related to COVID has reduced, and therefore the number of travel nurses has reduced, and at the same time we’ve continued to train more nurses,” Marsh said.

Efforts are underway to attract and retain nursing and hospital staff through increased recruitment campaigns and educational programs. According to Kaufman, hospitals are getting creative by running junior nursing academies.

“I know a couple of hospitals are doing those this summer, working with high school students to expand their awareness of health care,” Kaufman said. “A lot of hospitals are offering scholarships or tuition assistance.”

Ferguson said she and other nursing experts are reaching out to high schools and even middle schools to provide pathways to a nursing career.

“So we’re really trying to reach out to counselors at the different schools, we’re trying to get in there and talk to them, you know, have different faculty go in, talk about whether there are different roles of nurses, what they can do, because there are so many opportunities,” Ferguson said.

Jordyn Reed, administrator of the West Virginia Center of Nursing, said initiatives like the West Virginia Nursing Scholarship Program are helping staffing shortages among nursing specialties.

The West Virginia Nursing Scholarship Program provides scholarships to students seeking their LPN or RN certificates, and master’s or doctoral nursing degrees.

An analysis of scholarship completers in August 2020 found that 88.7 percent of program completers still maintain an active West Virginia nursing license.

“That program gives scholarship money for nurses all the way from LPN all the way through graduate nursing students, it gives them scholarship funds, in exchange for them completing service obligations in the state. We did an analysis back in August of 2020, that found, over 88 percent of the completers of that fellowship program are maintaining a West Virginia nursing license. So we found it’s a very good retention tool to keep nurses in the state.”

As communities and hospitals alike adjust to the health care industry post-pandemic, experts are hopeful for West Virginia nursing prospects.

——

This story is part of the series, “Help Wanted: Understanding West Virginia’s Labor Force.”

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting with support from Charleston Area Medical Center and Marshall Health.

W.Va. Hospitals Continue To Struggle Post-COVID-19

West Virginia’s hospitals continue to navigate an altered landscape since the onset of COVID-19. While there has been progress over the past year, hospitals in West Virginia still face a broad ranging shortage of healthcare workers. Health care providers struggle with a backlog of care for patients, problems with supply chains, mounting financial pressures and legislative changes to insurance.

West Virginia’s hospitals continue to navigate an altered landscape since the onset of COVID-19. While there has been progress over the past year, hospitals in West Virginia still face a broad ranging shortage of healthcare workers. Health care providers struggle with a backlog of care for patients, problems with supply chains, mounting financial pressures and legislative changes to insurance.

Jim Kaufman, president and CEO of the West Virginia Hospital Association, said staffing challenges are evident at nearly all of the state’s hospitals.

“We’re only operating about two thirds of the beds we’re licensed for in West Virginia because of staffing issues. It’s not just nursing, it’s respiratory therapists, it’s occupational therapists, patient care techs, it’s every profession across the board and it’s also non-clinical operations that are impacting hospitals’ operations.”

Kaufman said West Virginia hospitals spend an estimated $97 million due to registered nurse vacancies alone. Factors that have exacerbated the shortage include declining college enrollment, fewer people entering the profession, increased burnout, an aging workforce and COVID-19.

The association is working with health care providers on ideas that include an apprenticeship program as well as promoting more nursing career ladders which allow nurses to advance in steps through professional development.

“We’re trying to work creatively so as the state is producing more nurses or health care professionals, we can find a way to retain them here,” Kaufman said. “One positive is the huge demand we saw for traveler nurses during the pandemic. That’s easing because they don’t have these surges where they were trying to attract nurses on short notice, but they still have more than 200,000 vacant nurse positions nationwide.”

Kaufman said an initiative announced last June by Gov. Jim Justice to train more nursing and EMS professionals has helped. But while the number of nursing slots in the state has almost doubled, he said the benefits won’t be seen for a year or two.

“Some of the programs they’re doing in 18 months now, but still, it takes a year and a half to two years to get students through their program,” he said. “Once we’re producing them, it is one thing, but keeping them here because of our payer mix, we face a challenge in being able to offer them competitive salaries.”

Kaufman said federal health insurers compensate at a lower rate than private medical insurance.

“A hospital in another state that has a better payer mix, they’re going to have more commercial patients, which means more resources to offer higher salaries, facilities, etc.,” Kaufman said.

In its 2022 report on the state of the country’s hospitals, the American Hospital Association (AHA) reported an overall increase in labor costs, drugs, supplies and equipment. In West Virginia, Kaufman said operating expenses for some hospitals have risen by more than 20 percent since the onset of the pandemic.

“The average hospital in West Virginia right now is facing a -7 percent operating margin because costs have sky-rocketed,” he said. “I mean, everyone talks about the cost of energy for themselves, or food, and hospitals are seeing those exact things.”

In 2023, shortages still persist for things like intravenous contrast media products for computed tomography (CT) imaging, to infant formula.

“The consolidation of manufacturing capabilities in a handful of places, if they go offline. Infant formula was a great example. It was coming out of one place. Well, if one place shuts down for any reason, it has a huge rippling effect,” Kaufman said.  

Tim Martin, chief operating officer for Cabell Huntington Hospital – a 303-bed teaching hospital for Marshall University School of Medicine – said skyrocketing costs, underpayments from insurers, and staff shortages are burdening hospitals struggling to balance their budgets since before the pandemic.

“Coming out of the pandemic there’s been increases in staff pay and benefits pay, so you add that together and that’s the reason you are seeing these negative margins – the numbers simply don’t add up,” Martin said.  

Despite this financial dilemma, he said the hospital works with local schools to attract students across the healing arts and offers tuition reimbursement and forgiveness programs in addition to daycare assistance. And resources are distributed where possible to help cover patient care.

“We have a significant amount of staff that doesn’t work full-time hours,” Martin said. “We also have some highly skilled professionals and caregivers outside of direct patient care. We’re trying to encourage all available hands, personnel to pick up additional shifts.”

Martin said hours are closely monitored, and an employee assistance program helps staff who feel overwhelmed.

“We have put in fatigue mitigation stations where caregivers can go and detach from everyday grind or relax a little bit,” Martin said. “We’re trying to do everything we can to ensure they don’t reach that breaking point.”

About 75 percent, or three out of four of the state’s patients, are insured through government programs like Medicare and Medicaid or the Public Employees Insurance Agency (PEIA) for state employees. The national average is 45 percent. These programs traditionally pay providers less than the cost of care.

“That’s making it increasingly challenging for us to balance budgets and have that positive margin that we need to reinvest back into our infrastructure and to expand new technologies where we need to,” Martin said.  

In January, Wheeling Hospital announced it would no longer accept patients with PEIA. The hospital had struggled with multi-million dollar losses for years. Before the West Virginia Legislature stepped in this year, Kaufman said the insurer paid health care providers like WVU-Wheeling 50 percent of the Medicare rate, but four to five times more to out-of-state hospitals for the same service.

“Now that has actually flipped since the governor signed and the legislature passed legislation raising PEIA to 110 percent of Medicare,” Kaufman said. “As of July 1, Wheeling has announced that they will now go back into network with PEIA.”

In early 2020, Thomas Memorial Hospital filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. It emerged from bankruptcy the same year after entering into partnership with WVU Medicine to expand services and ultimately stabilize its financial challenges. WVU Medicine is a nonprofit health enterprise that owns 20 hospitals.

Martin said with people depending on hospitals 24 hours a day, limited resources will continue to threaten patient access to care and prove unsustainable in the long-term. The state also faces the challenge of delayed treatment during the pandemic for illnesses like cancer which translates to costlier care in the long run. When combined with a deficit of staff Martin says it could put a serious strain on a delicate system of care as it exists right now.

“The reason that concerns me, I’m not saying it can happen but I could foresee on the horizon, another health emergency across our country they need a higher level of care and it could overburden the health care system, Martin said.” 

“We know that even if we were to close those beds and right side our budget, patients are still showing up at our doors. That doesn’t go away. We’re put into this situation of morally and ethically what’s the right thing to do. Then you have this looming possibility of what might be out there on the horizon that we’ve got to start thinking about and preparing our health care systems for.”

The state also faces other obstacles.

“We have some of the worst statistics and that’s one of our challenges,” Kaufman said. “We have an older population, a sicker population, and when you add into the social economics, a poorer population.”

New Mobile Simulation Lab To Provide Medical Training To Rural Populations

The mobile simulation lab will provide access to nursing education for both currently practicing nurses and future nurses currently in nursing school.

The West Virginia Junior College (WVJC) School of Nursing at Mon Health has a new 38-foot mobile nursing lab, customized with two simulation hospital rooms and other equipment and supplies needed for practical nursing skill training.

The mobile simulation lab will provide access to nursing education for both currently practicing nurses and future nurses currently in nursing school.

David Goldberg, president and CEO of Mon Health System, said mobile training units help reach nurses and students in rural areas.

“As everyone knows, West Virginia, we’re a rural state,” Goldberg said. “So, making sure that we have tools to be able to train our staff that are all around the state with consistency is important. A lot of our rural communities don’t have access to state-of-the-art simulation equipment. This vehicle will give us the ability to go out to rural communities and reinforce opportunities to the nurses.”

The mobile unit will help with the healthcare worker shortage in the state by offering new and required training, brought to them on wheels. The highly specialized vehicle features a central control room, realistic simulation manikins, video recording and viewing technology.

“Our healthcare system is always in need of skilled nurses throughout the state,” said Chad Callen, CEO of WVJC. “This collaboration will allow our 18-month nursing program to extend the geographic reach of simulation training, especially in rural communities where access may be limited.”

The mobile simulation lab was made possible through donations by Ron and Stephanie Stovash, The Health Plan and the Hazel Ruby McQuain Trust.

WVU Nursing Program Sees Perfect Pass Rate On Accreditation Exam

All 23 students in the school’s BS/BA to Bachelor of Science in Nursing program passed the National Council Licensure Examination for Registered Nurses this past December on their first attempt.

The recent graduating class of West Virginia University’s (WVU) accelerated nursing program posted a 100 percent pass rate on their national licensure exam.

All 23 students in the school’s BS/BA to Bachelor of Science in Nursing program passed the National Council Licensure Examination for Registered Nurses this past December on their first attempt. The exam is required to become a registered nurse in the United States, Canada and Australia.

The 18-month program is for students who already had a bachelor’s degree and is composed of older students.

“It’s really great for those kinds of second degree students who wish to have a changing career,” WVU School of Nursing Associate Dean Brad Phillips said.

It’s the second year each student involved in the program has passed the exam, with the state Board of Examiners for Registered Professional Nurses also reporting a 100 percent pass rate in 2020. Counting each individual group of students, this marks the ninth time in the past six years the program has met the pass rate.

Phillips credits the success to the fact that the programs’ students have gone through bachelor’s programs before.

“They have previous degrees, they’re older, they’re more mature,” Phillips said. “They’re truly adult learners that bring a wealth of knowledge, wisdom and skills into their program.”

The national pass rate for first-time exam takers last year was 74 percent nationwide, according to the National Council of State Boards of Nursing, with the benchmark in West Virginia being 80 percent.

WVU also opened a similar program at their Bridgeport campus last month, in part to address a nationwide nursing shortage. 

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