CHARLESTON,  W.Va. (AP) — A $90 million verdict against a Charleston 
nursing home will stand  for now after a judge denied the business owner's request for a  new trial.
 
Kanawha  County Circuit Judge Paul  Zakaib Jr. ruled Wednesday that the verdict appropriately punished Heartland  of Charleston's corporate owner, HCR Manor Care, for a history of intentionally  short-staffing nursing homes to maximize profit, The  Charleston Gazette (
http://bit.ly/10Q2srh )  reported Thursday.
 
Tom  Douglas claimed in the lawsuit that his 87-year-old mother died of  
dehydration and complications stemming from her 19-day stay at Heartland of  Charleston in 2009.
 
Manor  Care lawyers raised several claims, including that the damages should have been  subject to the state's $500,000 medical malpractice cap. They said they will  appeal to the West  Virginia Supreme Court.
"This  is not a surprise. These rulings are consistent with those made during trial,"  Heartland lawyer Ben Bailey said in a release. "We believe they are wrong on the  facts and wrong on the law."
The  verdict was reduced from $91.5 million to $90.5 million soon after the 2011  trial after Zakaib ruled a small portion of the damage award fell under the  $500,000 medical malpractice cap.
The  lawsuit sparked a bill that is up for final passage Saturday that would place a  limit on the amount nursing homes would be forced to pay if sued by placing them  under the protections of the 2003 law that placed limits on medical malpractice  lawsuits, including a $500,000 cap on non-economic damages.
If  passed the law would not apply to the Heartland case. Even if it did, it would  not affect the vast majority of the verdict because $80 million was awarded for  punitive damages not covered by the legislation.
During  her brief stay at the nursing home, the woman suffered head 
trauma from several  falls and was confined to a wheelchair. She formed sores in her mouth that  generated dead tissue that doctors had to scrape away with a scalpel, Zakaib  wrote in his ruling.
 
Experts  said during the trial that staffers at the nursing home also failed to provide  the woman with basic needs, like food and water, which had been a contributing  factor in her death.
"It  is our hope that this will set an example," Douglas' lawyer, Mike  Fuller, said of the verdict. "The community of West Virginia will not accept  nursing home residents having to die from dehydration because of a corporation's  failure to provide even a cup of water."
Heartland  officials have said that the woman's death was a result of dementia, which is  the stated cause of death on her death certificate. They also pointed out that  she died 18 days after leaving Heartland.
Heartland  had a history of violations, including temporarily losing its Medicare and Medicaid funding in 2011 after state inspectors found dozens of violations.  In one instance, nurses' aides failed to assess a demential patient's head wound  for several hours.
Zakaib  also cited a 2009 survey that found the home was dangerously short-staffed.
One  nursing care staffer, Tara Boweles, testified during the trial that conditions  in the home were "horrible," saying: "I wouldn't put my dog there." She said  patients sometimes would lay in their own urine and feces for hours.
Staff  supervisor Beverly  Crawford testified that employees feared getting fired for reporting  patient neglect.
Zakaib  found that short staffing issues arose as the company sought to keep margins  high by hiring as few nurses' aides as possible. Tax forms presented at trial  listed more than $4 billion in revenue in 2009, including $75 million in  outright profit.
"Indeed,  to accomplish punishment and deterrence of such a wealthy company, a punitive  damage award must be necessarily high," Zakaib said in his ruling. "This verdict  sends a clear 'deterrence' message to a multi-billion dollar nursing home  corporation that its misconduct will not be tolerated in  West Virginia."
Read more: 
http://www.sfgate.com/news/article/Judge-denies-new-trial-in-nursing-home-lawsuit-4429837.php#ixzz2QO3nYZMY