MemberoftheFamily.net
MemberoftheFamily.net provides information on about 16,000 U.S. nursing homes, including easy-to-understand reports based on recent government surveys. We also compile a National Watch List of homes cited for violations or that have substantiated complaints made against them and we maintain an Honor Roll of places found to be deficiency-free. Below is a description of events that led to the founding of MemberoftheFamily.net, followed by comments from site users.
In 1996, during a routine visit to one of his patients in a Maryland nursing home, Dr. Edward C. “Terry” Watters noticed that her sight-threatening condition had worsened since his last visit. He discovered that his orders for treatment had not been followed, and as he was noting this in the patient’s chart, a staff member asked him not to do so because that would “cause problems” for the home—financially and with state reporting agencies. The staff member exhibited no sympathy for any pain the patient might be experiencing because of the failure to follow the treatment regimen. 
During the course of several visits, Terry noted in the chart additional times when the prescribed regimen hadn't been followed and confronted the staff about the problem. The last straw came when a staff member informed Terry that his notes had been removed from the chart because they would be a "red flag" to state auditors. (Dr. Watters subsequently learned that another patient in the home had recently died and that some of the evidence also suggested falsification of records, in this case regarding the details of the death.) 
Dr. Watters knew that the standards of care had been violated and the patients had suffered greatly because of this. He drew up a plan of action to help reduce the likelihood of such incidents in the future. He and a partner, Dennis Steele, learned how to petition for government reports about nursing homes—among them the federal Online Survey Certification and Reporting (OSCAR) 3 and 4 data—and how to read them. As they assembled the facts and ran statistical analyses, a bleak picture emerged of understaffing, physical abuse, untreated bedsores, and coldhearted decision-making by home operators and state officials charged with monitoring facilities.  
MemberoftheFamily.net first made its data available to the Veterans Administration in Washington, D.C, and North Carolina, analyzing for the agency government reports about nursing homes in which veterans reside. Now 22 Veterans Administration offices across the country subscribe to our service. Since 1999, we have made our research about more than 16,000 nursing homes available to the general public, providing easy-to-understand information from state and federal government reports.  
One of the site’s most useful sections is the National Watch List of all the nursing homes in the country that have been cited in government reports for causing "Actual Harm," Severity Code "G" or higher. We have also added a Registry of U.S. Nursing Homes, which lists all the Medicare-and Medicaid-certified nursing homes in the country.
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