LAO
April 02, 2026

Featured News

New AI Toolkit Includes Sample Policies, Other Considerations for Your Organization

AI has moved quickly into everyday operations in the aging services sector. This new toolkit provides a starting point for organizations to build a baseline understanding of AI and develop internal policies that set expectations for staff. In a highly regulated, people-centered field, that clarity is essential to protecting residents, supporting staff, and maintaining operational integrity.

Included in this toolkit are:

  • Key terms
  • AI Risk Tolerance
  • AI + HIPAA
  • Sample Policies

Download the AI Toolkit here.  

Find more LeadingAge Ohio toolkits here. 

You Asked... We Answered

You Asked... We Answered

You Asked: Where can the current scope and severity grid for nursing homes be found?  

We Answered: CMS provides this scope and severity grid in the State Operations Manual (SOM), Chapter 7 Survey and Enforcement Process for Skilled Nursing Facilities and Nursing Facilities, specifically under Section 7400.3.1 Matrix for Scope & Severity. This matrix outlines how surveyors determine the level of deficiency based on the scope (isolated, pattern, widespread) and severity (potential for minimal harm through immediate jeopardy). 

The CMS Five-Star Technical User Guide also includes the scope and severity grid, along with the points assigned to each level, which directly impact a facility’s Five-Star rating on Care Compare.

LeadingAge Ohio News

Palliative Care Summit Returns May 21

LeadingAge Ohio will convene providers, plans, and policymakers for its annual Palliative Care Summit on May 21 at the OCLC Conference Center in Columbus. The one-day event focuses on expanding access to palliative care across Ohio, with continuing education offered and a program shaped by feedback from last year’s summit.

The agenda includes a keynote on reframing palliative care messaging to support earlier referrals and reduce stigma, followed by a moderated discussion with health plans on network adequacy, telehealth, and partnership expectations. Additional sessions will examine scalable care models, statewide infrastructure, and data-informed approaches to access, along with an update on state policy priorities, grant opportunities, and momentum advancing palliative care across Ohio. Register for the Palliative Care Summit here.

Technology Network to Focus on AI Risks and Governance

LeadingAge Ohio’s Technology Network continues to bring members together for practical, peer-driven learning led by IT professionals from member organizations. Open to all members—not just technology staff—the network is designed to make complex topics approachable and relevant across roles and settings.

The next session, April 8 at 9:30 a.m., will focus on responsible AI use, including sustainability, ethical considerations, governance, and cybersecurity. Participants will hear directly from peers navigating these issues in real time, with discussion grounded in day-to-day operations and mission-driven care.

AI-training available: LeadingAge Ohio’s Laurinda Johnson provides a comprehensive AI training workshop to member staff on the basics of utilizing AI platforms, such as Copilot and ChatGPT. This training is intended for non-clinical use cases. If your organization is interested in learning more, contact Laurinda at ljohnson@leadingagehio.org.

Maximize Your Membership: Preferred Service Providers

LeadingAge Ohio is introducing preferred service providers to give members easier access to trusted tools, services, and cost-saving opportunities. These providers offer discounted rates, special offers, and exclusive benefits designed specifically for LeadingAge Ohio. We will be introducing these preferred service providers throughout the year and the benefits they will be offering our members.

Register for our special all-member webinar held April 8 and learn about the program, what you can expect throughout the year, and about our first PSP, Instrumentl - the all-in-one grant software offered at a discounted rate for LeadingAge Ohio members.

Regional Network Gatherings are Back for Spring 2026

LeadingAge Ohio’s Regional Network Gatherings return this spring, offering members the opportunity to connect with peers from across the state. These in-person gatherings center on conversation and relationship-building among mission-driven aging services organizations.

Join us at one of the networking events from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m.: 

Thank you to Platinum Partner Link-age Solutions for their continued sponsorship of the Regional Network Gatherings!

Attendance is free for LeadingAge Ohio member communities. Associate firms and partners are welcome to attend for a fee. Contact Corey Markham at cmarkham@leadingageohio.org for details.

Stay Connected Snapshot

There's always something happening at LeadingAge Ohio, view all upcoming events here and mark your calendar today!

LeadingAge News

Mark Your Calendar: Special April 6 National Policy Pulse Call

Join LeadingAge’s national policy team on Monday, April 6, for a National Policy Pulse call focused on the 2026 outlook for federal aging services policy and our assessment of how aging services providers will fare under President Donald Trump’s fiscal year 2027 budget request to Congress. Finally, we’ll also discuss LeadingAge’s priorities for Lobby Day, April 22, when hundreds of providers will visit House and Senate offices. LeadingAge members can sign up for the calls using the link on our National Policy Pulse webpage.

Dementia Inclusions Series—Beginning April 28—Now 50% Full: Sign Up Now

With more than seven million older adults living with dementia, aging services providers are being called to rethink long-standing assumptions about dementia care and to question whether current approaches truly reflect dignity, autonomy, and inclusion. LeadingAge’s Embracing Dementia Inclusion series creates space for LeadingAge members to engage in candid dialogue with peers, expert facilitators, and guest speakers–including people living with dementia–and to surface ideas, challenge norms, and imagine new possibilities. The spring series is 50% full—register here.

Housing and Immigration: Upcoming Policy-Focused Live Events

As the Department of Housing and Urban Development’s (HUD) policies, procedures, and staffing continue to evolve, affordable housing providers can get needed insights on current regulations and apply them to daily operations at our two-part Fair Housing in Focus: From Policy to Practice live event. Mark your calendars now: Thursday, April 30 and Thursday, May 14.

Seeking guidance on ways to maintain workforce stability while preparing for immigration enforcement activity? Join us on June 4 for Immigration Compliance for Aging Services Employers. LeadingAge will be joined by workforce and immigration expert Jacob Monty for an afternoon live event.

State News

LeadingAge Ohio Submits Comments on Pre-Clearance Vent Rule

This week, LeadingAge Ohio continued its advocacy on Ohio’s Medicaid nursing facility ventilator program, renewing requests made in February in an earlier request for information made by the Department of Medicaid. LeadingAge Ohio affirmed the Department’s proposal to require facilities employ respiratory therapy on a full-time basis, but allowing staffing to be on-call 24/7, rather than staffed 24/7 as originally suggested by LeadingAge Ohio. 

LeadingAge Ohio praised changes to the program including maintaining a separate rate for ventilatory weaning services, requiring prior authorization for 100 percent of non-invasive / tier 2 residents, and discontinuing ventilator programs that have not billed nor served individuals in the past 12 months. 

LeadingAge Ohio again encouraged the Department to align its coverage requirements with Medicare guidelines for ventilator care, which defines ventilatory dependence by blood gas levels as well as dependency on the ventilator for at least four hours per day (nonconsecutive), for at least 70 percent of days. 

To review LeadingAge Ohio’s full comments click here. If your organization offers ventilator care, please reach out to swallace@leadingageohio.org.

Aging Network Data Forum Returns April 28

The Ohio Department of Aging will host the next Aging Network Data Forum on April 28 at 1 p.m., continuing its quarterly series focused on strengthening how data is used across the state’s aging services network.

The April agenda includes:

  • Problem gambling among older adults – Shemane Armour, Ohio Department of Behavioral Health
  • Long-Term Care, Where Have You Been, Where are you Going? A Three Decade Study of Ohio's System – John Bowblis, Professor of Economics and Scripps Research Fellow; Bob Applebaum, Senior Research Scholar, Scripps Gerontology Center; Matt Nelson, Research Scholar, Scripps Gerontology Center
  • Updates to Ohio's Long-Term Care Quality Navigator – Ohio Department of Aging 

Register for the Aging Network Data Forum to attend. Questions can be directed to Age_PAE@age.ohio.gov.

Ohio Expands Next Generation MyCare Program to Additional Counties

Ohio continues to move forward with a major overhaul of how care is delivered to people eligible for both Medicaid and Medicare. The Next Generation MyCare Ohio program is central to that shift, bringing services under a single, coordinated model intended to simplify access and improve continuity of care. As Phase 2 launches April 1, providers in newly added counties will begin seeing operational and enrollment changes tied to this transition.

What You Need To Know

  • The Ohio Department of Medicaid is launching Phase 2 of the Next Generation MyCare program on April 1.
  • The program will expand into 10 additional counties: Ashtabula, Defiance, Erie, Fairfield, Fayette, Henry, Licking, Paulding, Sandusky, and Williams.
  • MyCare coordinates Medicare and Medicaid benefits for more than 250,000 Ohioans who are dually eligible.
  • The updated model includes expanded behavioral health services, transportation supports, and stronger access to long-term services and community-based care.
  • Three statewide plans—Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield, CareSource, and Molina Healthcare of Ohio—will serve members; Buckeye Health Plan will not accept new members in 2026.

What Happens Next

  • Additional counties will continue to phase in throughout 2026 as Ohio moves toward a fully statewide model.
  • Members in newly added counties will begin enrollment and transition into participating health plans.
  • Providers should expect continued alignment of Medicare and Medicaid services under single managed care plans.

What to Do

Ohio Aging Director Tapped for Federal Healthcare Advisory Role

Ohio Department of Aging Director Ursel McElroy has been selected to serve on a new federal Healthcare Advisory Committee, a national body charged with advising the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services on improving care delivery and financing. The committee will focus on strengthening Medicare, Medicaid, and Marketplace programs, with attention to chronic disease management, administrative burden, and care for vulnerable populations.

McElroy’s appointment positions Ohio’s aging services network within key federal policy discussions at a time of continued pressure on reimbursement, workforce, and care coordination. The committee is expected to begin meeting later this year, with recommendations informing future federal direction on quality, data use, and program sustainability. Read more on the Ohio Department of Aging’s website.

Federal/National News

MAHA Elevate to Fund Wellness, Prevention in 3-year Grants

Last month, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services announced new grant opportunities through a new program, Make America Healthy Again: Enhancing Lifestyle and Evaluating Value-based Approaches Through Evidence (MAHA ELEVATE).  MAHA ELEVATE is part of the Administration’s plan to reform America’s health systems to address the chronic disease epidemic. 

The model will provide approximately $100 million to fund 3-year cooperative agreements for up to 30 proposals that promote health and prevention for Original Medicare beneficiaries. The proposals will utilize evidence-based, whole-person care approaches — including functional or lifestyle medicine interventions — currently not covered by Original Medicare. These approaches are intended to support, not replace, the medical care received by people with Medicare. MAHA ELEVATE will also gather and evaluate new data on cost and quality to inform future interventions promoting healthy lifestyle behaviors and ultimately reduce spending in Original Medicare. The first cohort of this voluntary model will launch October 2026, and initial letters of intent are due no later than April 10. 

Senior living operators are uniquely positioned to demonstrate the value they already provide through wellness supports to individuals already residing on their campuses. If you plan to apply for MAHA ELEVATE, please let our team know by emailing swallace@leadingageohio.org

House Effort Advances TPS Extension for Haiti

Late on March 27, 2026, a procedural effort in the House of Representatives cleared a major hurdle by securing the necessary 218 signatures to force a vote on extending temporary protected status (TPS) for Haiti. Learn more about the impact for LeadingAge members, and stay on top of all foreign-born worker-related developments via this serial post.

LeadingAge Ohio continues to gather input on the extent to which our members rely on workers who are part of the TPS program. If you employ individuals who have temporary protected status (TPS), Haitian or otherwise, please reach out to Susan Wallace at swallace@leadingageohio.org to be connected to advocacy partners active in this area.

CMS Signals New Expectations for Food and Nutrition Services

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) issued a Quality and Safety Special Alert Memo on March 30, reminding hospitals of their obligations for patient food and nutrition services, including alignment with the Dietary Guidelines for Americans, 2025–2030, released in January. Though nothing has been directed at nursing homes, members should still be prepared for survey enforcement based on national guidelines. 

What You Need To Know

  • The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services issued a Quality and Safety Special Alert Memo on March 30 focused on patient food and nutrition services.
  • CMS expects alignment with the Dietary Guidelines for Americans, 2025–2030, including limiting ultra-processed foods, using 100% whole grains, and keeping added sugars at or below 10 grams.
  • The memo outlines practical changes, such as replacing processed meats with freshly prepared proteins and avoiding sugar-sweetened beverages.
  • While directed at hospitals, these expectations apply to nursing homes through existing requirements to follow “established national guidelines.”

What Happens Next

  • CMS has not released nursing home-specific guidance.
  • Surveyors can still assess compliance under current federal regulations without additional direction.
  • LeadingAge is monitoring for any nursing home-specific updates.

What to Do

  • Review menus and food service practices against the updated dietary guidelines.
  • Identify areas where ultra-processed foods, refined grains, or added sugars exceed recommendations.
  • Begin aligning meal planning and purchasing practices with national dietary standards.
  • Read the full CMS memo.

Nursing Facility News

Survey Tip of the Week: Emergency Preparedness Deficiencies

Emergency preparedness continues to be an area of focus during surveys, with CMS identifying recurring deficiencies under Appendix Z. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) has developed a Frequently Cited Emergency Preparedness (EP) Citation & Potential Impact resource to help providers better understand how these requirements are evaluated and commonly cited. This resource highlights key compliance gaps and offers insight into surveyor expectations.  

To further support providers, ASPR TRACIE has created the CMS Emergency Preparedness Rule webpage, which includes provider-specific checklists aligned with Appendix Z, as well as additional tools and resources to assist with compliance. This includes by-provider checklists, encompassing CMS’ Appendix Z guidance, and also provides various other resources and tools. CMS has identified the following as the top five most commonly cited emergency preparedness deficiencies in nursing homes:  

  • Emergency preparedness testing requirement 
  • Development, review and updating of the emergency preparedness plan 
  • Long-Term Care emergency power 
  • Subsistence Needs 
  • Emergency preparedness training 

Surveyors are evaluating not only whether required elements are in place, but also whether they are current, implemented, and reflective of the facility’s operations and risks. Deficiencies often occur when plans are not updated, drills are not conducted or documented appropriately, or staff are unable to demonstrate knowledge of their roles during an emergency. 

CMS also offers free on demand emergency preparedness training through the QSEP portal. This course is the same training used for surveyors and provides a helpful overview of regulatory requirements and the survey process. CMS notes that facilities may benefit from completing this training to better understand expectations and identify potential gaps in their programs. 

Member News

Barton Communities Breaks Ground on New Senior Housing in Oberlin

Construction is underway on a 62-unit affordable senior housing community in Oberlin, marking the second collaboration between LeadingAge Ohio member Barton Communities and SLK Capital Holdings.

The development will expand housing options for older adults with moderate incomes, offering both apartment-style units and cottages designed to support independence and aging in community. It reflects growing demand across Ohio for accessible, affordable housing that meets the needs of older adults who fall between traditional subsidy programs and market-rate options.

Barton Communities’ continued investment in this space highlights the role nonprofit providers play in addressing housing gaps and advancing community-based solutions.

Read the announcement in Crain’s Cleveland Business for more information on the project and its impact on the Oberlin community.

Education and Resources

Check out the LeadingAge Ohio Education Calendar!

LeadingAge Ohio holds valuable education webinars and in-person events throughout the year. Opportunities are added weekly. See the complete Schedule of Events.

Assisted Living News

Wallace Joins Five States in Waiver Discussion

At this week’s National Investment Center (NIC) conference in Nashville, LeadingAge Ohio president / CEO Susan Wallace joined state association leaders from California, Minnesota, Georgia, and Oregon to discuss their states’ disparate approaches to offering assisted living to low-income older adults. Minnesota and Oregon lead the country in prioritizing home- and community-based care options, while Wallace highlighted recent gains for Ohio’s assisted living waiver, with both increased rates in 2023 as well as policy changes that enable assisted living to be paired with 4 percent low-income housing tax credits to finance development. 

“Opportunity abounds… for now” Wallace reflected, noting challenges on the horizon, including Medicaid cuts via HR1 as well as a gubernatorial election later this year. 

Model Points to New HCBS Role for Assisted Living Providers

A new Medicare-focused model from ATI Advisory outlines how assisted living providers could help deliver home- and community-based services to middle-income older adults—those who don’t qualify for Medicaid but can’t afford care on their own. The proposal targets improved care coordination and reduced healthcare spending, with projected Medicare savings of more than $500 million over 10 years.

For providers, the model highlights potential reimbursement pathways for services such as medically tailored meals, transportation, and personal care—areas where assisted living operators are already positioned to deliver support, particularly for residents without Medicaid coverage.

Read the full McKnight’s Senior Living article for more on how the model works and what it could mean for assisted living providers nationwide.

Upcoming Events

April 2, 2026
10:00AM - 11:30AM

Advocacy Committee

Virtual

April 6, 2026
12:00PM - 1:00PM

New LeadingAge Ohio Program + Instrumentl Information

April 7, 2026
9:00AM - 10:30AM

Southwest STARS Awards Breakfast

Bethany Village