OST Nursing Home grows
By James Giago Davies
Native Sun News Today Contributing Editor
WHITE CLAY— In January of 2020 the
Oglala Sioux Tribe Nursing Home located in White Clay, Nebraska, will open a new 12-bed memory wing. This will bring the total bed capacity for the facility to about 70, and allow the Tribe to
care for tribal members with memory issues, close to home.
For almost half a century, the
Oglala Sioux Tribe (OST) struggled to get a tribal nursing facility, but failed in the face of a South Dakota moratorium on the number of facilities allowed. About 15 years ago, the foundational efforts to bring about the current OST began with current board president Kathy Janis, tribal attorney Mario Gonzalez and tribal financial officer Gary Russ. Richard Rangel and Associates designed a beautiful building, and the professional management organization run by Ron Ross, Native American Health Management, was hired to manage the facility.
The
nursing home was constructed on tribal land just south of the Nebraska border, allowing the Tribe to get around the South Dakota moratorium and create a state-of-the-art facility working with the state of Nebraska.
Construction on a new memory wing at the Oglala Lakota Nursing Home near Whiteclay, Nebraska, began in October 2018. Photo by James Giago Davies / Native Sun News Today
Securing the funding to operate the facility became possible because of CPE’s, certified public expenditures. Under federal rules and regulations, health care provider organizations can participate in CPE programs. In a CPE, a state is able to certify unreimbursed Medicaid eligible costs expended by the public health care organization and draw down the applicable federal Medicaid matching funds associated with those costs. Ross was an expert when it came to CPE’s.
“It’s nice to have his company managing because they help us out a lot,” said Gonzalez. “Ron Ross’s knowledge of the CPE payments (made a difference), being the former treasurer of the state of Nebraska.”
“I am so happy that this is moving forward,” Janis said. “We worked on it for a long time.
It’s gone way beyond what we started. With the help of elders, with the help of prayer, with the help of dedicated persons that were on the board, we are where we are now, and we are doing good.”
Janis is particularly happy about the help the state of Nebraska provided: “They bent over backwards to help us.”
Interim Facility Manager, Tiffany Shangreaux said, ““I have been in other nursing homes but this place is more like a home.”
“We’re excited for the Oglala Sioux Tribe,” Ross said. “Because we’re now going to be be able to meet some of the tribal member needs we weren’t able to meet in the past, in particular folks who have memory care issues, and there are some tribal members that we were not able to admit because we just couldn’t meet their needs in a normal nursing home.”
This prompted the memory wing expansion, and the facility designed to facilitate just such an addition.
“But now with this new wing that’s being built,” Ross said, “we’ll be able to meet those needs. We’re gonna have twelve private rooms, and they’ll have their own staff, they’ll have their own courtyard, and the furnishing and the environment there will assist people whether they have Alzheimer’s or some other form of dementia. This is just a service that the nursing home’s gonna be able to provide. We're looking forward to it and we should have it up and going here in a few months.”
The specifics of the memory wing took careful consideration, and much thought went into details to guarantee the safety of the residents.
“Probably one of the biggest difference is it’s a locked unit,” Ross said. “You need to have a locked unit because whether it’s really hot outside, and they could get out and get dehydrated, or whether its winter and its freezing outside, and so a locked unit is very important for a memory care because a lot of times these folks just don’t have the functionality to know the weather, know what’s good for them, it’s just a part of the disease process.”
To provide quality care for memory wing residents, staff will have to be trained specifically for that purpose.
Ross: “We do special training so (employees) can act and react to help the residents.”
James Giago Davies is an enrolled member of the Oglala Lakota tribe. He can be reached at skindiesel@msn.com
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