Resident Selection in a Connecticut Nursing Home

Abstract
Using data from a year of participant observation, this study provides a detailed description of resident selection procedures in a for-profit Connecticut skilled nursing facility. A system of multiple payers for nursing home services created a hierarchy of admission preferences that privileged those who could pay and denied access to the least profitable and the sickest individuals. Prescreening and waiting list juggling were strategies employed by the home to maximize the selection of private-paying residents and residents requiring the least care.

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