McKnight's June 24, 2024
Irving Stackpole, John Sheridan

There are markets for just about everything, where sellers and buyers exchange goods and services. The same is true for nursing homes; “sellers” (providers) make their services available to patients and families (consumers) in exchange for payments from the government, or another intermediary (customers). Most markets and services have life cycles; they emerge, they grow, they mature and then, inevitably, they decline.

In the nursing home market, however, no one wants what is being sold. The consumers and the customers need what’s being sold. The need often leaves little or no choice.

After all, nursing homes have two essential value propositions:

  1. Safer and effective transitions
  2. Competent custodial care

That’s it!

This is what nursing homes do....

Today's Sponsors

LEK
ZeOmega

Today's Sponsor

LEK

 
Topics: Post-Acute Care, Provider
Early hospice care has transformative impact
Twin Brothers Launch Seen Health with $22M to Provide Culturally-Focused Care for Seniors
‘Overpayment’ Clawbacks Hanging Over Home Health Providers’ Heads
Senior Living Sits at Crossroads of Optimism, Uncertainty On the Cusp of 2025
Nonprofit Wesley Housing Nearly Doubles Portfolio in Deal That Includes Affordable Senior Housing

Share This Article