Friday, June 11, 2010

Alzheimer's Patient Murdered with Morphine at N.C. Nursing Home

A caregiver is charged with murdering an Alzheimer's patient at a North Carolina nursing home with a heavy dose of morphine. Investigators say 44-year-old Angela Almore, who worked at Britthaven of Chapel Hill, is charged with second-degree murder in the February, 2010 death of 84-year-old Rachel Holliday.
Almore was indicted Monday according to CBS affiliate WRAL.

In addition to the murder case, Almore faces charges of felony abuse, related to hospitalization of six other Alheimer's patients to whom authorities say she also gave morphine."

Alzheimer's Patient Murdered with Morphine : "HILLSBOROUGH, N.C. (CBS/WRAL)

Tuesday, June 01, 2010

VIDEO: NYC Nursing Home Abuse seen

Nurse Jessie Joiner landed herself in court after she appeared to jerk a wheelchair out from under an elderly patient, a fall which caused the victim to break her hip.

Nurse Jessie Joiner landed herself in court after she appeared to jerk a wheelchair out from under an elderly patient, a fall which caused the victim to break her hip.

But CBS got an exclusive look at what happens when a nurse, instead of taking care of a patient, causes incredible harm. It was a case of nursing home horror -- and it was all captured on tape.

In a video a nurse is seen allegedly dumping an elderly woman in a wheelchair on the floor.

It has led to criminal charges filed against the nurse by the attorney general.

The NY attorney general said everything you need to know about the criminal charges Joiner faces is on the video recorded by a camera placed to protect patients and staff, by the William Benenson Rehabilitation Pavilion in Queens.

The incident happened on March 20, just after 9 p.m. Joiner is seen on video pushing a medication cart but suddenly abandons the cart and heads to the patient in the wheelchair. Joiner appears to jerk the chair sharply to the left and the woman, who is 85 years old and suffers from dementia, goes flying to the ground, a fall that breaks her hip.

story VIDEO: NYC Nursing Home Assault

Friday, May 28, 2010

Nursing Home Charged $29M in Wrongful Death Death

Nursing Home Charged $29M in Wrongful Death Death

Two small firm lawyers joined forces to win a $29 million jury verdict against a nursing home for delaying treatment of a 79-year-old woman who suffered a fractured hip and bed sore that led to her death.

Edward Dudensing, who runs a two-lawyer firm in Sacramento, Calif., and Jay Renneisen, founder of the two-lawyer Nursing Home & Elder Abuse Center in Walnut Creek, Calif., grew up in the same neighborhood, went to the same law school and both specialize in elder abuse cases.
Trying their first case together, they convinced the jury that the nursing home chain’s chronic understaffing and a corporate scheme that siphoned profits to an alter-ego entity merited punitive damages.

“The corporate manipulation of money earned by the facility supported our position that this was an organization that puts profits over patient care,” said Dudensing.

A decision to leave three health care workers on the jury - including a nurse who raised her hand during jury selection to say she thought jury awards are too high and that punitive damages are generally not a good idea - resulted in a surprise ending to the seven-week trial.

“We went back and forth about it, but we felt good about having health care providers on the jury for liability, and we were willing to take our chances that punitive damages would be lower,” said Dudensing.

In the end, however, the jury was so outraged that it ignored the plaintiffs’ request for $10 million in punitive damages and instead nearly tripled that amount to $28 million.

Defense attorney Michael Levangie of Prout LeVangie in Sacramento, Calif. did not return a call seeking comment.

Understaffing

The case alleged that Horizon West, owner of 33 nursing homes across California and Utah, delayed the diagnosis and treatment of Frances Tanner, a 79-year-old Alzheimer’s and dementia patient, for eight days after she fell and fractured her hip. During the delay, she developed a bed sore that was also listed as a cause of death on her death certificate.

At trial, the plaintiffs’ lawyers argued that the facility under-budgeted for staff and kept staffing at the bare minimum.

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Nursing Home Sex Abuse Widely unreported

CLEVELAND -- The state Attorney General's Office received 158 complaints of sexual violence against elderly and disabled residents of long-term care facilities in Northeast Ohio since January 2006, but only two of those cases ended with a conviction, a Channel 3 News investigation found.

Most of the complaints were forwarded by the Ohio Department of Health, which received 324 complaints statewide, alleging rape and other sexual abuse of residents in nursing homes, residential care facilities and assisted living facilities.

Investigator Exclusive: Nursing home sex abuse unreported, unprosecuted

Saturday, May 08, 2010

Nursing Home Death Ignites Official Inquiry

CHAPEL HILL -- An 84-year-old nursing-home patient who died in February had toxic levels of morphine in her body, according to a medical examiner's report released last month.

The State Bureau of Investigation is looking into Britthaven of Chapel Hill after several residents tested positive for opiates following Rachel Holliday's death on Feb. 16.

UNC Hospitals caregivers found more than 50,000 nanograms of morphine per milliliter in Holliday's urine. More than 2,000 nanograms would trigger a positive result in employment screenings, based on federal guidelines.


nursing home probe - Health/Science - NewsObserver.com

Monday, April 26, 2010

More Abuse Complaints against Massachusetts Nursing Facilities

According to the Quincy Patriot Ledger, complaints against Nursing Homes for abuse and neglect in Massachusetts are on the rise.

The Massachusetts Dept of Public Health last year investigated several hundred complaints of elder neglect or abuse.

Monday, March 22, 2010

Selecting Nursing Home - Tips

Take care to read the fine print, do research

Quincy attorney Bernard J. Hamill, who represents victims of nursing home abuse, says family members placing loved ones in the homes should be mindful of their rights and do diligent research.

Read the fine print: Hamill said predispute arbitration agreements, which bar a resident from suing the nursing home, should not be a requirement for admission. He advises against signing such agreements without first talking to an attorney.

“You do not have to sign it. It’s negotiable,” Hamill said.

Stay a while: Hamill recommends eating a meal in the prospective nursing home, taking note of how many of the residents are dressed and up for meals and what activities are available, and talking to nursing assistants and staff.

Check the report card: Massachusetts nursing homes are inspected each year and a report card of the results are online at http://webapps.ehs.state.ma.us/nursehome/. The overall information available online is limited.

The federal government runs the Five-Star rating Web site www.medicare.gov/nhcompare, which allows consumers to compare nursing homes to each other and see how they rate overall and on inspections, staffing and quality of care

Article by Jessica Fargen. See article here.

Thursday, March 18, 2010

5 Million Punitive damages set in Phila. bedsores death case

In an highly unusual step for such a case, a Philadelphia jury today leveled $5 million in punitive damages against Jeanes Hospital and a Wyncote nursing home in the death of a man who developed ultimately fatal bedsores while at both facilities.

The damages - $1.5 million against Jeanes and $3.5 million against the Hillcrest Convalescent Home - came two weeks after the same Common Pleas Court jury awarded $1 million in compensatory damages in the case. The damages were awarded to the widow of Joe N. Blango, who died of bedsores in 2008, two years after being discharged from Jeanes Hospital in the city's Fox Chase section.

While compensatory damages are not unexpected in such cases, punitive damages are, according lawyer Robert L. Sachs, who handles nursing-home cases and serves as liaison to the Philadelphia court for other nursing-home litigators.

"To my knowledge, this is the first nursing-home case to go to the jury on punitive damages in Philadelphia," said Sachs, who was not involved in the Blango case.

Rebecca Harmon, a spokeswoman for Temple University Health System, which owns Jeanes, said Temple would appeal the verdict.

"There is not one shred of evidence to support any liability in this case as it relates to Jeanes Hospital, and the contemplation of punitive damages is simply inexplicable," she said in an e-mail. "We're very proud of the high-quality care provided to patients each and every day at Jeanes Hospital."

Attempts to reach a representative for Genesis HealthCare Corp., which owns Hillcrest, were unsuccessful.

Steven R. Maher, who represented Blango's widow, said that in his 25 years of handling such cases, this was only the second time a jury had awarded punitive damages.

One reason, he said, was the high standards required to permit punitive damages to be considered. A jury must find that a facility had engaged in "outrageous and reckless conduct," he said.

Blango went to Jeanes on May 21, 2006, after suffering weakness and confusion. He was 74 at the time and was thought to have suffered a stroke.

According to Maher, doctors at Jeanes failed to properly diagnose that Blango was suffering from a urinary-tract infection that, as a result, worsened and left him susceptible to the bedsores that ultimately killed him.

After about a week at Jeanes, Blango was transferred to Hillcrest, where he stayed two weeks until his condition worsened and he was returned to Jeanes. He was released to go home after three days.

Maher contended that workers at Jeanes and Hillcrest allowed the bedsores to fester and Blango to go malnourished to the point that he lost 28 pounds.

After he returned home, Blango was cared for by his wife, Shirley, before dying from the bedsores two years later.

"This verdict sends a message," Maher said, "that this type of care is unacceptable and will not be tolerated."

href="http://www.philly.com/inquirer/breaking/business_breaking/20100317_Unusual_damages_set_in_Phila__bedsores_case.html">

Monday, March 08, 2010

Nursing home residents often sign away rights to sue

Nursing home residents often sign away rights to sue

Many seniors entering nursing homes in Massachusetts are unwittingly signing away their rights to sue the facilities in the event of neglect or bad medical care, and officials in Washington are seeking to ban what they see as a “hidden” practice.

The seniors are being urged to sign contracts that put disputes in the hands of arbitrators. Advocates say vulnerable elderly patients fail to realize they are giving up their rights to bring cases of slipshod treatment before a judge and jury.

“It gives the nursing home carte blanche to abuse these elderly people because they won’t have to answer to it” in court, said Marlene Owens of South Easton, who successfully challenged an arbitration agreement signed by her “delusional” elderly stepfather in 2003.

She is now suing his former nursing home over bad care.

The Boston Sunday Herald reported yesterday that nearly 40 percent of the state’s nursing homes performed significantly below average, according to annual inspections, and that numerous residents suffer abuse and neglect or receive shoddy care. The Bay State nursing home population is about 45,000.

With nursing homes here and nationwide pressing residents to sign the arbitration agreements - often tucked away in thick and complex admission packages - lawmakers including U.S. Rep. Barney Frank (D-Newton) are weighing federal action.

Family members and residents are emotional at admission time and overwhelmed by paperwork, said Janet Wells, director of public policy at the National Citizens’ Coalition for Nursing Home Reform. “They may not be aware the agreement is there. They may feel they don’t have a choice but to agree,” Wells said.

Studies show nursing home arbitration dramatically reduces payouts in cases where seniors have been wronged. The average nursing home claim amount in the United States shrank from $261,000 in 1998 to an estimated $116,000 in 2008, during a period when tort reform and arbitration increased, according to a 2009 Aon Corp. The average payment in arbitrated cases was $91,000, compared to $138,000 in nonarbitrated cases, about 35 percent less.

Frank, who supports federal legislation to ban the agreements in nursing homes, said they have no place in the elder-care facilities.“With older people you ought to be especially careful. This principle is a bad one,” said Frank. He said that though arbitration can be a good way to handle disputes, it should be a choice.
“You shouldn’t have to sign one in advance in these one-sided contracts,” he said.

Frank and U.S. Rep. William Delahunt (D-Quincy) are among 28 sponsors of the legislation, which was filed by California Rep. Linda Sanchez. It is pending in front of a House subcommitee.

The nursing home industry has mobilized against the bill.

Arlene Germain, president of Massachusetts Advocates for Nursing Home Reform, said the agreements capitalize on vulnerable seniors. “They should not lose the ability to hold nursing homes accountable in the event of abuse or neglect by signing away their constitutional right to have their cases heard by a judge and jury,” she said.

http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1238037

Take care to read the fine print, do research when choosing Nursing Home

Take care to read the fine print, do research

Quincy attorney Bernard J. Hamill, who represents victims of nursing home abuse, says family members placing loved ones in the homes should be mindful of their rights and do diligent research.

Read the fine print: Hamill said predispute arbitration agreements, which bar a resident from suing the nursing home, should not be a requirement for admission. He advises against signing such agreements without first talking to an attorney.

“You do not have to sign it. It’s negotiable,” Hamill said.

Stay a while: Hamill recommends eating a meal in the prospective nursing home, taking note of how many of the residents are dressed and up for meals and what activities are available, and talking to nursing assistants and staff.

Check the report card: Massachusetts nursing homes are inspected each year and a report card of the results are online at http://webapps.ehs.state.ma.us/nursehome/. The overall information available online is limited.

The federal government runs the Five-Star rating Web site www.medicare.gov/nhcompare, which allows consumers to compare nursing homes to each other and see how they rate overall and on inspections, staffing and quality of care

Article by By Jessica Fargen
Monday, March 8, 2010
Boston Herald

http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1238035

Sunday, February 28, 2010

East Coast nursing home chains settle Kickback allegations

East Coast nursing home chains settle kickback allegations - chicagotribune.com

Posted using ShareThis

Without admitting wrongdoing, two East Coast nursing home chains and their principals agreed to pay the federal government and state Medicaid programs a total of $14 million to settle a whistle-blower lawsuit alleging Medicare and Medicaid fraud, the Justice Department announced Friday.

Adam Resnick, a Chicago businessman, brought the fraud allegations in a 2006 civil lawsuit filed in Boston federal district court. The U.S. Justice Department intervened in December 2008.

Resnick is a self-described addicted gambler who last year completed a 25-month federal prison sentence for his role in a $10 million check-kiting scheme that led to the collapse of Universal Federal Savings Bank, in the Pilsen community. With the help of a bank insider and an accountant, prosecutors disclosed, Resnick wrote bogus checks to cover his seven-figure losses at casinos and through bookies.

Resnick recently published a cautionary autobiography titled, "Bust: How I Gambled and Lost a Fortune, Brought Down a Bank — and Lived to Pay For It."

The agreement announced Friday does not establish what share Resnick will claim of the $14 million, but his attorneys said they expect him to get $1 million to $2 million. He plans to apply the bulk of it to pay down the roughly $10 million restitution he still owes for his role in the bank collapse.

"I really appreciate the tenacious work the government attorneys did on this case," Resnick said in a written statement. "If nursing homes take kickbacks, decisions they make about drugs for their residents ultimately may be based on financial benefits to the nursing homes rather than medical benefits for their patients."

The case settled Friday is among a cluster of federal whistle-blower lawsuits involving Omnicare Inc., the nation's largest supplier of drugs to nursing homes. Without admitting wrongdoing, Omnicare paid $19.8 million in November to settle an earlier portion of Resnick's whistle-blower lawsuit.

Friday's settlement arises from government allegations that the Atlanta-based Mariner Health Care Inc. and SavaSeniorCare Administrative Services LLC nursing home chains solicited kickback payments from Omnicare in exchange for agreements by Mariner and Sava to continue using Omnicare's pharmacy services for 15 years. The companies deny wrongdoing.

"Nursing home residents and their families are entitled to make health care decisions free from the distortions caused by illegal kickback schemes," said Tony West, assistant attorney general for the Justice Department's Civil Division.

Thursday, February 25, 2010

nursing home probed after death

http://www.newsobserver.com/2010/02/17/343957/nursing-home-probed-after-death.html

CHAPEL HILL -- An incident at a Chapel Hill nursing home is being investigated after several patients mysteriously tested positive for opiates, officials said today.

The Britthaven of Chapel Hill nursing home, which has a spotty record of patient care, notified state authorities after one patient's blood tests showed the presence of opiates, despite not being prescribed the narcotic. That patient died of an unrelated bout of pneumonia, said Phillip Hill, vice president of operations for Britthaven, Inc.

But when that patient's blood results came back positive for opiates, nursing home staff grew alarmed. They noted that some other patients in the home's 29-bed Alzheimer's unit showed signs of lethargy, and were also tested. Opiates were found in at least two other patients, who were admitted at UNC Hospitals.

Britthaven then notified authorities, including the Chapel Hill Police Department and the state Department of Health and Human Services, which oversees adult care facilities.

"Obviously if somebody wasn't on the medication that showed up in the bloodstream you want to know how it got there," said Jeff Horton, head of the Division of Health Service Regulation.

Hill said the incident remains perplexing, because no drugs were out of order or missing at the nursing home. He said the police found no evidence that a crime was committed, but the company is continuing its investigation.

"It's real hard to determine what caused a patient to have a positive drug screen," Hill said. "Many types of antibiotics can give a false positive for opiates."

In the meantime, he said, the regular staff of the nursing home's Alzheimer's unit has been temporarily replaced with workers on loan from the corporate offices in Kinston and from other nearby facilities.

"We are reassuring family members that we have a completely new team on this," Hill said, adding that security at the facility has also been ramped up. "Residents are safe."

Britthaven has had regulatory issues in recent years at its Chapel Hill facility, which has 133 beds. Prior to the current incident, the nursing home had been designated a "special focus facility" because of persistently poor care. As a result, Horton said, the facility gets two inspections a year instead of one.

During inspections in 2008 and 2009, the nursing home was found to have subjected some residents to imminent jeopardy by failing to protect them from abuse. Residents got only about half the state average of hour of care by certified nursing assistants. In November, Britthaven paid a federal fine of $7,117.54 for failing to provide enough supervision to prevent accidents to residents.

"It dealt with having safe water temperatures in their patient areas," said Beverly Speroff, with the Division of Health Service Regulation.

Speroff said this afternoon that state inspectors have not yet visited Britthaven. Typically, state inspectors, who work on behalf of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, collect information on possible violations by observing the nursing home, conducting staff and family interviews, and reviewing medication records. "Generally, we're going to collect as much data on this situation as possible," Speroff said.

Deal Offered to Aide in KY Abuse case

LEX 18 has learned a plea deal has been offered to a former nurse's aide accused of abusing an elderly patient at a Madison County nursing home.

Amanda Sallee is set to go to trial on wanton neglect and abuse charges March 15. Details of the plea deal were not discussed in court Thursday, but a judge gave Sallee until March 4 to decide if she'll take it.

Sallee, 31, is one of three former nurses aides at Madison Manor Nursing Home in Richmond accused of abusing the late Armeda Thomas. The 84-year-old's granddaughter placed hidden cameras in Thomas' room, fearing Thomas was being neglected by nursing home staff. Sallee is seen on tape eating Thomas' food instead of giving her the meal.

Two other women have pled guilty to similar charges after they were caught on camera taunting and grabbing Thomas around the neck.

Thomas' family is also pursuing civil action in addition to the investigation brought on by the attorney general's office.

http://www.lex18.com/news/former-aide-offered-plea-deal-in-nursing-home-abuse-case

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Senior Awarded $7.75 Million in Nursing Home Abuse Lawsuit

Senior Awarded $7.75 Million in Nursing Home Abuse Lawsuit

Senior Awarded $7.75 Million in Nursing Home Abuse Lawsuit
Ventura County, CA: Maria Arellano has been awarded a $7.75 million settlement by the jury who heard her case against the Fillmore Convalescent Center.

The suit alleged that the 71-year old woman was abused during her time at the nursing home. Due to a prior stroke she was unable to speak or walk. Evidence in the form of film clearly showed an employee of the nursing home, Monica Garcia, slapping Arellano, pulling her by her hair, roughly handling her neck and hands and treating her violently in a shower seat.

Arellano's lawyers provided evidence that the nursing home had been notified of the abuses, in writing, by more than one family, with at least one party naming Garcia. The center and its owner contended that Garcia's actions were so horrible that they exceeded the scope of her employment. Garcia admitted to physically abusing Arellano on that day only. The award included $5 million in punitives.