
State Auditor Suzanne Bump
âSuzanne is really here to listen,â Thomas Keady told a group of about 30âincluding second-year MSW students in the Older Adults and Families concentration from the ÍćĹź˝ă˝ă School of Social Work (ÍćĹź˝ă˝ăSSW) as well as faculty and alumni in the fieldâgathered in a conference room in McGuinn Hall. Keady is ÍćĹź˝ă˝ăâs vice president of governmental and community affairs. Christina Matz, ÍćĹź˝ă˝ăSSW associate professor and chair, Older Adults and Families, moderated the discussion.
The Commonwealthâs longest-serving female constitutional officer, Bump conducts regular performance audits of state agencies (e.g., the Executive Office of Elder Affairs) to determine whether theyâre running efficiently and effectively. âWe focus on, âHow are you spending the money? Are you following the rules?ââ Bump explained. âBut also: âAre you fulfilling your mission? Where are the bottlenecks? Are the people being well served?ââ
Bump contacted Keady to request the meeting at ÍćĹź˝ă˝ăSSW, one of a series of informal fact-finding conversations sheâs been holding with students and practitioners of social work focused on elders. Her goal is to learn where the glitches are in state-run elder servicesâproblem areas where she might next train her gaze as auditor. That afternoon, Bump heard from those working on the ground, struggling to help people dealing with social isolation, dementia, and mental illness. The social workers told the state officials about the challenges they face as they help older adults navigate state servicesâand the gaps between them.
Danielle Lubin, MSW â19, who works in the geriatric psychiatric unit at McLean Hospital in Belmont, finds herself thwarted when trying to arrange a lift home for an outgoing patient through the MBTAâs The RIDE program, a resource for people who have a disability that prevents them from using other forms of public transportation. Her patients are often released with psychotropic medications, Lubin said, and many are unable to drive. Yet âThe Ride does not recognize mental illness as a reason to grant a 30-day medical necessity order for its services, as they do for patients discharged from a medical hospital.â
âVery interesting,â said Bump, as she and her colleague Bill Keefe, director of audit planning and review, took notes. âI can see that making its way into an audit quite readily.â
Kenna Sullivan, an assistant director of field education at ÍćĹź˝ă˝ăSSW, also works at McLean Hospital as well as Winchester Hospital. She outlined an all-too-common scenario. First, someone sees an older, self-neglecting neighbor wandering about, looking disheveled, and calls 911.
âA lot of times these folks are socially isolated,â said Sullivan. âThey may have family members that are either not engaged or theyâre estranged from them for whatever reason. There may be memory issues. Some of these folks are help-rejecting.â Sullivan says the patient is brought to the emergency room for assessment. Following the medical examination, the emergency room doctor finds no acute medical problem, and tells Sullivan, âThey have no medical issues. They do not require a medical admission and therefore they are your problemâ as the emergency room social worker.
 âSo then, weâre kind of stuck,â related Sullivan. âThe dollars-and-cents people in the hospital are saying, âthereâs no medical justification to admit them and therefore there will be no reimbursementâ however, I donât feel safe sending them home given their mental status and their inability to care for themselves.â  Â
Kelsey Anderson, MSW â19, finds instances of self-neglect in her work on a local Alzheimerâs Association help line. In one case, she said, a man with a dementia diagnosis called and revealed to Anderson that he hadnât been eating. âHe didnât have food in the home,â she said.
When Anderson asked a superior what to do, she was told, ââWell, you could report it to [Adult Protective Services], but theyâre going to say, âIf you havenât had eyes on him, you donât know that heâs not eating, so weâre probably not going to substantiate this.ââ
Connecting socially isolated and mentally ill individuals to the services they need is a constant challenge made harder by systemic flaws of that sort, Anderson continued. âBasically, we have to wait until he gets worse and he canât live alone, or something happens thatâs so severe that he ends up hospitalized. Itâs a major gap and it creates silos that get in the way of being able to help these adults to live successfully in the community.â
After listening to these and other tales of bureaucratic snags and snarls, Bump said that not only might the issues raised that afternoon become areas of inquiry for future audits, but also that her office serves as a resource for the state legislature, potentially putting data on such failings in elder services directly into lawmakersâ hands.
âThank you for the service youâre providing to all of your clients, and to our society,â Bump added.
Before concluding the meeting, Matz noted gains on issues facing older adults in recent years, including Massachusetts Governor Charlie Bakerâs first-ever mention of aging in a State of the Commonwealth address in 2017. âThereâs a lot thatâs really great thatâs going on in Massachusetts right now around aging,â said Matz. âAnd then thereâs a lot that we could do better.â