[Congressional Bills 119th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[S. 3491 Introduced in Senate (IS)]
<DOC>
119th CONGRESS
1st Session
S. 3492
To amend titles XVIII and XIX of the Social Security Act to require
skilled nursing facilities, nursing facilities, intermediate care
facilities for the intellectually disabled, and inpatient
rehabilitation facilities to permit essential caregivers access during
any period in which regular visitation is restricted.
_______________________________________________________________________
IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES
December 16, 2025
Mr. Blumenthal (for himself and Mr. Cornyn) introduced the following
bill; which was read twice and referred to the Committee on Finance
_______________________________________________________________________
A BILL
To amend titles XVIII and XIX of the Social Security Act to require
skilled nursing facilities, nursing facilities, intermediate care
facilities for the intellectually disabled, and inpatient
rehabilitation facilities to permit essential caregivers access during
any period in which regular visitation is restricted.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the
United States of America in Congress assembled,
SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.
This Act may be cited as the ``Essential Caregivers Act of 2025''.
SEC. 2. FINDINGS.
Congress finds the following:
(1) According to the National Center for Health Statistics
of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, an estimated
1,300,000 individuals resided in nursing homes in 2020 at the
onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, and nearly half of all nursing
home residents were living with a diagnosis of Alzheimer's or
other related dementia.
(2) Regulations issued pursuant to subtitle C of title IV
of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1987 (commonly
known as the ``Nursing Home Reform Act of 1987'') (Public Law
100-203) established basic rights and services for residents of
nursing homes, including ``the right to a dignified existence,
self-determination, and communication with and access to
persons and services inside and outside the facility''.
(3) In March of 2020, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services instructed nursing facilities to restrict visitation
for all visitors and non-essential healthcare personnel and
cancel communal dining and group activities. Long-term care
ombudsman program representatives and State surveyors were
among those whose access to long-term care facilities was
prohibited or extremely restricted despite reopening guidance
released by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services in May
of 2020.
(4) Many long-term care residents declined dramatically or
died prematurely from ``failure to thrive'' in isolation.
(5) According to the National Consumer Voice for Quality
Long-Term Care, in the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic, 1
in 5 healthcare workers resigned, retired, or were fired. This
exacerbated the longstanding problem of staff shortages that
already existed. Lack of staff, combined with the forced
absence of families, many of whom provided informal care and
support to residents, resulted in a significant decline in
residents' health and well-being. During the pandemic, pressure
ulcers in nursing home residents rose by 31 percent, the number
of residents experiencing significant weight loss rose by 49
percent, the number of residents reporting feeling down,
depressed, or hopeless rose by 40 percent, and the number of
residents prescribed antipsychotic medications rose by 77.5
percent.
(6) According to the Department of Health and Human
Services, loneliness and isolation, such as that experienced by
long-term care residents during the COVID-19 pandemic,
represent profound threats to an individual's health and well-
being.
(7) Essential Caregivers provide supplemental care for
their loved one, regardless of staff shortages, staff turnover,
or emergencies. Essential Caregivers support residents and
advocate on their behalf.
SEC. 3. RIGHT TO ESSENTIAL CAREGIVERS; ACCESS TO ESSENTIAL CAREGIVERS
DURING PERIODS WHEN VISITATION IS OTHERWISE RESTRICTED.
(a) Medicare Skilled Nursing Facilities.--Section 1819(c)(3) of the
Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1395i-3(c)(3)) is amended--
(1) by redesignating subparagraphs (A) through (E) as
clauses (i) through (v), respectively;
(2) by striking ``A skilled nursing facility must--'' and
inserting the following:
``(A) In general.--A skilled nursing facility
must--''; and
(3) by adding at the end the following new subparagraph:
``(B) Access to essential caregivers during
emergency periods when visitation is otherwise
restricted.--
``(i) Designation of essential caregiver.--
Each skilled nursing facility must recognize
the right of each resident of such facility
to--
``(I) designate and have access to
essential caregivers for such resident
at all times, including during any
period of emergency in which regular
visitation is restricted by order of a
Federal, State, or local authority or
by other operation of law; and
``(II) amend such designation at
any time.
``(ii) Presumption of designation.--For
purposes of clause (i), in the case of a
resident who is unable, by reason of cognitive
or mental disability, to make an election
described in such clause, the resident
representative (as defined in section 483.5 of
title 42, Code of Federal Regulations) of such
resident may make such designation for such
resident.
``(iii) Access to essential caregivers
during emergency periods when visitation is
otherwise restricted.--During a period of
emergency in which regular visitation is
restricted by order of a Federal, State, or
local authority or by other operation of law,
including any period in which a waiver or
modification of requirements pursuant to
section 1135 is in effect, a skilled nursing
facility must--
``(I) not deny in-person access to
a resident by an essential caregiver of
the resident except as provided in this
subparagraph;
``(II) allow at least 1 essential
caregiver to have access to and provide
assistance to such resident at such
facility every day and at any time;
``(III) enforce the agreement
described in clause (vii)(II) with
respect to an essential caregiver; and
``(IV) provide reasonable
accommodations to protect the rights of
a roommate co-living with a resident
who has an essential caregiver.
``(iv) Restrictions on access.--
``(I) In general.--During a period
of emergency in which regular
visitation is restricted by order of a
Federal, State, or local authority or
by other operation of law, including
any period in which a waiver or
modification of requirements pursuant
to section 1135 is in effect, a skilled
nursing facility--
``(aa) may, subject to item
(bb), deny access to a resident
by an essential caregiver of
the resident for--
``(AA) an initial
period of not longer
than 7 days; and
``(BB) one
additional period of
not longer than 7 days
(in addition to the
initial period
described in subitem
(AA)) if the department
of health or other
applicable agency of
the State in which the
facility is located
approves the denial of
access for such
additional period; and
``(bb) must allow access to
a resident who is in end-of-
life care or a resident in
decline or distress, as defined
by the Secretary.
``(II) Rule of application.--For
purposes of subclause (I), a period of
emergency in which regular visitation
is restricted by order of a Federal,
State, or local authority or by other
operation of law shall begin on the
date that such order or other operation
of law takes effect and shall end on
the date that such order or other
operation of law expires or is
otherwise terminated. During any such
period, the maximum number of days for
which a skilled nursing facility may
deny access to a resident by an
essential caregiver of the resident is
7 total days (or, subject to the
approval of the department of health or
other applicable agency of the State in
which the facility is located, 14 total
days).
``(v) Compliance and notification.--
``(I) Authority.--No essential
caregiver who upholds the agreement
described in clause (vii)(II) shall be
denied access to the skilled nursing
facility of the resident involved.
``(II) Notification.--If an
essential caregiver fails to comply
with an agreement with a skilled
nursing facility described in clause
(vii)(II), the facility must first
provide a warning to the essential
caregiver and resident in writing
citing specific issues of non-
compliance and providing clear guidance
for corrective measures.
``(III) Enforcement.--If an
essential caregiver or resident, after
receiving a notification of
noncompliance described in subclause
(II), fails to take corrective action,
the essential caregiver may
subsequently be denied access to the
resident. In such cases, the facility
shall provide to such caregiver and
such resident (or health care proxy of
such resident), not later than 24 hours
after such denial of access occurs, a
written explanation as to why such
caregiver was denied access to such
resident. Such explanation must include
the resident's and caregiver's options
for appeal under the processes
established under clause (vi).
``(vi) Options for residents and caregivers
to appeal denials of access.--
``(I) In general.--Not later than 2
years after the date of enactment of
this subparagraph, the Secretary shall
issue a final rule establishing a
process for residents and caregivers to
appeal denials of access to the State
survey agency.
``(II) Appeals process.--The State
survey agency shall--
``(aa) receive appeals from
residents and essential
caregivers challenging a
decision by a skilled nursing
facility to deny access under
clause (v); and
``(bb) begin investigating
such appeals not later than 2
business days after receiving
such appeals.
``(III) Burden of proof.--During an
appeal received under the appeals
process established under subclause
(I), if a skilled nursing facility
defends a decision to deny access to an
essential caregiver under clause (v) on
the basis that the essential caregiver
violated the agreement described in
clause (vii)(II), the skilled nursing
facility shall have the burden of proof
in demonstrating that the essential
caregiver violated such agreement.
``(IV) Resolution of appeals.--
``(aa) Determination.--With
respect to an appeal received
under the appeals process
established under subclause
(I), the State survey agency
shall make a determination as
to whether a skilled nursing
facility violated a requirement
or prohibition of this
subparagraph within 48 hours of
commencing its investigation.
``(bb) Violations.--If the
agency determines that a
facility has violated such a
requirement or prohibition, the
agency shall--
``(AA) require the
facility to allow
immediate access to the
essential caregiver in
question;
``(BB) require the
facility to establish a
corrective action plan
to prevent the
recurrence of such
violation within a 7-
day period of receiving
notice from the agency;
and
``(CC) impose a
civil money penalty in
an amount to be
determined by the
agency (not to exceed
$5,000) if such
facility fails to
implement the
corrective action plan
with the 7-day period
specified in subitem
(BB).
``(vii) Definition of essential
care