Judge Rules Nursing Home Arbitration Clause Can Stay
Judge Rules Nursing Home Arbitration Clause Can Stay
The federal Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) created a new rule in September of this year that prevented most nursing homes and long-term care facilities from adding a forced arbitration clause to the contracts of new residents that effectively strip them of their right to sue in court in the event of neglect, abuse and wrongful death (among other human rights violations) that may take place while in the institutional care of others. By implementing the new rule, the CMS was actively seeking to protect some of our country's most vulnerable members, along with their families and loved ones, against settling such disturbing instances behind closed doors and out of the public eye. Not surprisingly, the industry itself did not approve and in turn, did the exact thing they want to prevent clients of these types of care-centered facility mistreatments from being allowed to do: they filed a lawsuit to stop the rule from becoming law. On November 7, 2016, the judge presiding over the case sided with the plaintiffs by issuing a preliminary ruling that successfully thwarts CMS' ability to enforce the rule.CMS created the tenet, which stipulated long-term care facilities who planned to or already do accept Medicare and Medicaid may only do so by removing arbitration clauses from the contracts of incoming residents, in order to protect the civil rights of elders; contracts already in place would not have been affected.Forced arbitration is a tactic used by corporate giants to protect their public image by insisting any and all claims and complaints filed against them be settled behind closed doors with private lawyers retained by the companies themselves to ensure their own, as well as the perpetrators', reputation remains in good standing, free from undesirable judgment or assumption about their manner of business and how they handle it.
Nursing home abuse; image courtesy of The Inquisitr
Sources:
Court: Nursing Homes Can Continue Stripping New Residents Of Their Right To Day In CourtFederal judge grants nursing-home arbitration injunctionConsumer groups, lawmakers disappointed but hopeful after arbitration ban blockedSCOTUS Look at Nursing Home Arbitration: 'Mystifying,' Intriguing
About Susanna Leighton
Susanna Leighton is a freelance writer and editor based in Southeast Michigan. A graduate of Eastern Michigan University, Susanna holds degrees in speech pathology and human services. She is a former special education teacher, an avid lover of all things science, and a steadfast supporter of justice and equality for all. She is currently working on her first book of personal essays entitled, 'A Day Leighton, A Dollar Short.'