S-3492-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Finance.
Sponsored by Richard Blumenthal (D-CT)
What it does
This bill would prohibit Medicare skilled nursing facilities, Medicaid nursing facilities, Medicaid intermediate care facilities, and associated inpatient rehabilitation facilities from restricting access by designated "essential caregivers" — typically family members or close companions — to residents. During declared emergency periods (such as a pandemic), facilities could restrict access for an initial period of up to seven days, with one possible extension of up to seven additional days if approved by the state health department. Essential caregivers would be required to follow any facility safety protocols, which may be no more stringent than those applied to facility staff.
Who benefits
Residents of nursing homes, skilled nursing facilities, intermediate care facilities, and inpatient rehabilitation facilities — estimated at roughly 1.5 million Americans — who would retain access to family members and other personal caregivers. Family members and friends serving as essential caregivers who were separated from loved ones during past emergency restrictions. Residents with cognitive impairments (e.g., dementia) who may rely heavily on familiar caregivers for comfort and daily functioning. Mental health advocates who have documented isolation-related decline in long-term care populations. Facilities that rely on unpaid caregiver labor to supplement staff care.
Who is hurt
Long-term care facilities that would face new federal compliance obligations and potential loss of Medicare/Medicaid funding for violations. Facility administrators and infection control officers who would lose discretionary authority to restrict access during health emergencies beyond the 14-day maximum. State health departments that currently have broader authority to set visitation rules during emergencies would see that authority constrained. Other residents of facilities who could face increased exposure to pathogens if caregiver access introduces infection during an outbreak. Facility staff who may bear additional burden of monitoring caregiver compliance with safety protocols.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that COVID-19 demonstrated the severe human cost of blanket visitation bans in long-term care facilities, where residents experienced accelerated cognitive decline, depression, and preventable deaths from isolation — not just from the virus itself. They contend that essential caregivers provide medically significant support — feeding assistance, mobility help, emotional regulation — that facility staff cannot fully replicate, and that a hard 14-day cap with state oversight strikes a reasonable balance between infection control and resident welfare. They point to studies showing that social isolation in nursing home populations is independently associated with increased mortality.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that capping emergency access restrictions at 14 days could endanger residents and staff during fast-moving infectious disease outbreaks where the epidemiological picture may not be clear within two weeks, as was the case in the early weeks of COVID-19. They contend that infection control decisions require real-time clinical judgment by facility medical staff and state public health authorities, and that a federal statutory ceiling removes the flexibility needed to respond to novel pathogens with unknown transmission profiles. They further argue that requiring caregiver protocols to be no more stringent than staff protocols may be medically inappropriate, since staff receive professional training that casual visitors do not.