Contact
State Office of Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program
Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services
PO Box 570
Jefferson City, MO 65102-0570
Phone: (800) 309-3282
Email: LTCOmbudsman@health.mo.gov
Visit us on Facebook
The Missouri Long-Term Care (LTC) Ombudsman Program is a statewide network of advocates dedicated to protecting the rights and improving the quality of life for residents in long-term care facilities. Through a volunteer-based model, the program provides independent support, education, and problem-solving assistance to empower residents and resolve their concerns. This essential service ensures that seniors have a trusted voice to help maintain their dignity and ensure they receive the high standard of care they deserve.
The word ombudsman (om-budz-man) is of Swedish origin, and means one who speaks on behalf of another. The Missouri Long-Term Care (LTC) Ombudsman Program is a statewide network of individuals who help residents in long-term care facilities maintain and improve their quality of life by helping ensure their rights are preserved and respected.
Ombudsmen have many different roles in their work:
Missouri's ombudsman program is a network of ombudsmen volunteers serving residents of nursing homes and residential care facilities to provide support and assistance with their problems or complaints. Individual ombudsman volunteers are recruited by regional ombudsman coordinators in their local ombudsman programs, operated by the Area Agencies on Aging (AAAs) or their service providers. The volunteer becomes familiar with the facility and its procedures and then begins regular visits with the residents.
As residents get to know the ombudsman volunteer, they are able to discuss complaints and concerns with the volunteer. The volunteer helps the residents to work through their issues, and helps them become empowered to resolve complaints.
The long-term care industry grew fast during the 1960s with little regulation. After well-publicized reports of abuse, neglect and substandard conditions in nursing homes, several congressional committees were convened to hear testimony and propose regulations for the nursing home industry. The following timeline offers a brief history of the program.
Over time, amendments to the Older Americans Act changed the Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program. However, those changes always strengthened the program by clarifying the role of the Ombudsman as an independent advocate for vulnerable adults living in long-term care settings. As long as residents experience substandard care as a result of poor regulation, enforcement, and care delivery, Ombudsman will continue to have a role to play in long-term care facilities.
The Missouri Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program is administered by the Office of the State Long-Term Care Ombudsman located in the Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services (DHSS) within the Division of Senior and Disability Services (DSDS).
The State Office of the Long-Term Care Ombudsman (Office), with the State Ombudsman as its head, provides the management, direction and programmatic oversight of all activities related to the Office.
Missouri law requires the DSDS to contract with Area Agencies on Aging (AAA) to operate the programs and services of the Older Americans Act (OAA), including the Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program services.
This chart shows the relationship of agencies responsible for implementing programs for the elderly, such as the Ombudsman program as outlined in the Older Americans Act.
The volunteer model operates on the principle that knowledge of a particular facility enables the regular volunteer ombudsman to handle problems more effectively. And when the volunteer ombudsman has an established relationship with the residents and staff, resolution is easier. Ombudsmen assume the role of confidant to the residents, and therefore, residents are more likely to express concerns that might not otherwise surface.
Ombudsmen provide a personalized approach to their work. Regular contact with residents builds trust, visibility and clarity of purpose.
The focus of the ombudsman efforts is resident-initiated complaints. While complaints may be made on behalf of residents by other individuals, ombudsmen are careful that such complaints accurately reflect the concerns of the resident.
Complaints are received in the strictest of confidence. Investigation and resolution are not attempted without the resident's permission. An exception to this might be a problem in the nursing home that affects more than a single resident, allowing the ombudsman to begin to work on the problem without revealing which resident or residents expressed the concern. No problem is too big or too small for the ombudsman to deal with. In fact, ombudsmen can often solve a little problem before it grows serious.
A key concept in this program is the word "empower." To empower is to enable or permit some action. Ombudsmen always look for ways to empower residents to help themselves. It would be ironic if this very system, set up to ensure that residents know their rights and maintain their dignity, became a patronizing part of the problem.
It is important to understand the Ombudsman Program does not have enforcement powers of its own and is not a regulatory agency in any sense. Trust and confidence can be maintained only so long as residents, nursing home facilities, agencies, and the public know the ombudsman has no vested interest in any given case. The ombudsman's only interest is ensuring long-term care residents are able to freely exercise their rights.
The mission of Missouri's Long-term Care Ombudsman Program is: To improve the quality of life for residents of long-term care facilities through advocacy and education. The goals of the program are to:
These goals will help to ensure and maintain the best quality life possible for all residents in long-term care facilities.
To achieve these goals ombudsmen should: