《Abandoned Nursing Home》 “No breakfast” The business model behind the “cheap” monthly fee of “110,000 yen” in Tokyo… Residents include “people on welfare” and “people highly dependent on medical care” Multiple former employees experience “unpaid troubles” | News Post Seven 2024.10.13 10:59 News Post Seven “They admitted people who should have been hospitalized” (former employee A) — A “residential-type paid nursing home” in Adachi Ward, Tokyo, has become a hot topic due to “unpaid wages” and the “mass resignation” of about 30 employees, leaving nearly 90 residents behind. The facility has 187 rooms and the monthly fee is listed as “approximately 108,000 yen.” [Part two of a two-part series.] Read from the first part] According to statistics published by the nursing care facility search site “lifull nursing care,” the average monthly fee for a paid nursing home in Tokyo is “201,000 yen.” Even compared to this figure, the facility’s monthly usage fee of 108,000 yen is significantly cheaper. Why did the management set the prices like this? Former employee A revealed, “I think management had their own intentions.” (Omitted) Continued below. https https https
>>1 Is there any reason to insist on building nursing homes in Tokyo? Why not impose a special tax on Tokyo and use it to build nursing homes in the countryside instead of the nursing care insurance paid by the local governments?
>>13 Those kinds of people can get into a cheap nursing home right away The ones who are in the most trouble are former salarymen who only have a pension of around 100,000-200,000 yen.
>>15 Since they are bedridden, it would cost 500,000 yen to let all five of them stay in bed. Even if you take good care of them, they will still be bedridden.
I feel like there are quite a few cases where people who start businesses simply change industries from poverty-stricken businesses. This is the result of the LDP and the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare neglecting welfare too much.
I certainly don’t think there’s any need to eat three meals a day… So that would mean it would be easier for workers to prepare after lunch, so I guess it would be lunch and dinner…
As the article says, they were probably thinking of a model to make money from nursing care. In fact, visiting care is profitable because the facility does not require travel.
[While the weak Reiwa believers are eating half-price lunches for 198 yen, Yamamoto Taro is eating a 5000 yen eel lunch with the money he saved up for correspondence. This is too neoliberal. Image included] Yamamoto Taro eating a 5001 yen eel lunch on the Shinkansen. A man who makes a salary of over 10 million yen pretends to be a commoner, but Taro is a believer.
A sweet bun sold at convenience stores for a little over 100 yen or a cheap boiled egg + banana from the supermarket for a little over 100 yen?
+A small bottle of milk, soy milk, or vegetable juice for a little over 100 yen at the convenience store Or rice + natto + egg + miso soup +A small bag of seaweed + tea That’s about 200 yen a meal x 30 days = 6,000 yen a month, and even with the labor costs of preparing the food + cooking and serving it, the cost of breakfast is double, about 12,000 yen? My mom, who’s probably always been of medium build, says she eats a little over half what she did when she was younger, and I know the amount old people eat is limited, but I’d like a cheap breakfast that’s a little nutritious.
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