Tuesday, November 02, 2010

Care facility sued after woman jumps out window

Dementia patient Merle Fall died after jumping out the second-floor window of a Ridgeland nursing home.
The state Department of Health cited the Ridgeland Pointe Senior Living Community following Fall's death in March, requiring the facility to move its Memory Care Unit to the first floor.
But when an investigation by the attorney general's office found no criminal violation under the Vulnerable Adults Act, Fall's family filed a lawsuit against Ridgeland Assisted Living LLC and Emeritus Corp. The complaint, filed in Madison County Circuit Court, accuses the companies of neglect and seeks at least $500,000 in damages, plus attorney fees.
The companies deny the allegations and say the family has failed to prove Fall was "harmed due to defendants' negligent or reckless conduct."
Fall's daughter, Diane Phillips, said she had decided to bring her 83-year-old mother, suffering from advanced dementia, to a nursing home after she wandered away one day. "I always said the first time she left home, we'd have to put her in a safe place," Phillips said. "We didn't want her to get hurt."
She admitted her mother Feb. 25. "It was a lockdown unit where they assured us she would be safe," Phillips said.
Several days later, she and her husband visited. According to the lawsuit, she found her mother smelling like urine and dressed in the same clothes she had been wearing when admitted.
Ridgeland Pointe officials deny this claim, saying such allegations are inconsistent with their investigation as well as the attorney general's investigation.
While there, she said a nurse pointed to a chair and mentioned her mother had tried to go out the window. Phillips said her husband checked the window and noticed it was unlocked - something nursing home personnel promised to fix.
The evening before March 6, Fall had been seen wandering the hall, going in and out of various residents' rooms, Kizzy Blount, a resident on duty, told investigators from the attorney general's office. She said Fall was later seen trying to open the locks on her window about 2 a.m.


Care facility sued after woman jumps out window | clarionledger.com | The Clarion-Ledger

Nursing Home Closing

A southern Illinois nursing home will surrender its license and close its doors after the state says the home failed to comply with safety regulations.

The Orchard Court Nursing Home in Jonesboro houses 15 residents.
The facility will surrender its license and close within 90 days.
Orchard Court has also agreed to pay a $12,000 fine.
The settlement was reached Monday.

In a document more than 50 pages long, the Department of Public Health gives numerous examples of the facility failing to protect residents from violent attacks.

"When you see a pattern of behavior, when you see these continued abuse or neglect type situations we look at that pattern and if we find they are not able to comply with the statute we then move towards license revocation," says Melaney Arnold with IDPH.

Most of the incidents stem from an 18 year old resident with profound mental retardation.
Numerous times he injured and even hospitalized other residents.
One report describes the beating of a 62 year old blind resident who was treated for lacerations to his head.

Officials say this is abuse.
Each long term care facility is responsible to develop an appropriate care plan for each resident.

"Whether that be means they need to be in a single room, whether that be means they need one-on-one supervision," says Arnold.

IDPH says the facility had been in trouble for some time. Orchard Court was already operating under a type A license, which means during inspection they were found to have some of the most serious violations.

"License revocation is not very common and for this to happen we definitely felt there were issues with continued care and operation with this facility," says Arnold.

In fact, Orchard Court is only one of seven long term care facilities up for license revocation in the state.
The facility could have appealed the citation but surrendered that right. In a statement they said money is the issue.

"Orchard Court is operated by a small not for profit company that cannot afford a protracted legal fight with the government" they say.

The facility also admits no wrongdoing and disagrees with the state's actions.

The residents will soon be moved to other nursing homes.

Orchard Court says they were trying to care for the more severely disabled residents who have been turned away from other state-run facilities.
They say a lack of adequate funding was also an issue.
They claim the state still owes them 6 months worth of pay.



WSIL TV • Nursing Home Closing

Houser being sued again for alleged nursing home neglect

George Houser, who already lost one costly lawsuit over poor care at one of his nursing homes, is now facing another challenge in court.

A Rome woman is claiming her husband was neglected during his five-week stay, and the lack of care led to his eventual death.

Elaine Siegel is being represented by Mike Prieto of Perrotta, Cahn and Prieto, P.C., the same law firm that represented Loretta Terhune, a woman who sued Houser after her father died in one of Houser’s facilities six months after entering it. Houser was ordered to pay the daughter $37 million.

Also named as defendants are Subacute Services Inc., SAS — Mount Berry Inc. and Mount Berry Convalescent Center LLC.

In the lawsuit filed Thursday evening in Floyd County Superior Court, Siegel claims that her husband, Solomon Siegel Jr., entered Summit Health and Rehabilitation Center on Three Mile Road in Rome on Oct. 3, 2008, for rehabilitation for a stroke. He was 79 at the time and had a history of stroke and diabetes, among other medical conditions, the lawsuit stated.

Prieto contends that Houser was still acting as part owner when Solomon Siegel died.

In 2007, the three nursing homes operated under Houser’s Forum Medical Group name closed, including what was then called Mount Berry Nursing and Rehabilitation Center on Three Mile Road.

The closings came after the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services informed the Forum Medical Group that it would no longer pay for care unless drastic improvements were made.

The Three Mile Road site later reopened as Summit Health and Rehabilitation Center.

The lawsuit contends the patient developed multiple ulcers that went untreated and became infected.

On Nov. 7, 2008, Solomon Siegel was taken to the emergency room with an elevated white blood cell count, according to the lawsuit. Nine days later he died.

Siegel is asking for punitive damages and liability.

Houser and his wife, Rhonda Houser, are both facing federal criminal charges after being accused of defrauding Medicaid and Medicare out of $30 million.

He is scheduled for a pretrial hearing in federal court in Rome on Tuesday.

Siegel contends that the nursing home staff failed “in numerous ways to provide the care, treatment and series that her husband needed in a skilful and non-negligent manner.”

She specifies that the nursing home failed to follow federal and state requirements for a long-term care facility and did not follow standard medical and nursing practices.



Read more: RN-T.com - Houser being sued again for alleged nursing home neglect

RN-T.com - Houser being sued again for alleged nursing home neglect

Huge Verdict Shakes Nursing Homes

SAN FRANCISCO -- During Cindy Cool's almost daily visits to the nursing home, she would routinely find her Alzheimer's-suffering father wearing urine-soaked clothes.

The Blue Lake resident said it would take upwards of 20 minutes for the apparently short-handed staff of Eureka Healthcare and Rehabilitation to respond and help Cool clean her father. Other patients fared worse, she said.

"A lot of times I walked out of there crying because of the things I saw," Cool said in an interview.

She provided key testimony before a Humboldt County jury last month slammed the owners of her father's nursing home with a $677 million verdict, sending shock waves through the industry and rekindling calls for tort reform.

The verdict as it stands is already thought to be the largest in the country this year and its ramifications are still being sorted out weeks after the jury surprised even the plaintiffs' lawyers with the size of their verdict. Tort reformers have seized on the verdict as the latest example of litigation abuse.



The company's stock price has plunged on fears it will have to file bankruptcy. Cool, 58, was part of a class-action lawsuit representing 32,000 patients that blamed the nursing home staff shortage for the misery she encountered -- echoing a common complaint across the country that for-profit nursing homes are too concerned with the bottom line.

After Wall Street investment firms went on a nursing home buying spree during the early years of the new century, critics charge that many companies drastically cut payroll expenses to prop up stock prices.

"The major problem for most nursing homes in California and in the nation is staffing," said Pat McGinnis, executive director and founder of the California Advocates for Nursing Home Reform.

Many of the 16,100 homes nationwide are owned by public companies. The home where Cool's father lived and died in 2006 is owned by Skilled Healthcare Group Inc., which is traded on the New York Stock Exchange.

On July 6, the Humboldt County jury found that Skilled Healthcare on numerous occasions violated state regulations requiring it to keep a minimum number of nurses on duty at its 22 homes in the state.

James Gomez, president and chief executive of the California Association of Health Facilities, called the verdict "outlandish, excessive and extreme" and said a "good provider of skilled nursing care" is likely bound for bankruptcy if the verdict holds up, threatening the livelihoods of 14,000 California workers.

The lawsuit accused Orange County-based Skilled Healthcare of failing to maintain 3.2 nursing hours per patient per day at its 22 nursing homes in California. The company is just the 10th largest, based on beds, in an industry that struggles to keep workers.

"The verdict is a statement that facilities must follow the law and meet minimum standards," McGinnis said.

McGinnis said the 3.2 nursing hours required by California should be an easy standard to meet because it's nearly a full hour less than the federal recommendation of 4.1 nursing hours per patient.

"The fact that this company couldn't maintain these minimum standards makes you wonder why it was in the nursing home business to begin with," McGinnis said.

Skilled Healthcare Chairman and CEO Boyd Hendrickson said in a statement immediately after the verdict that the company is "deeply disappointed" in the verdict and believes its nursing homes are appropriately staffed.

"We strongly disagree with the outcome of this legal matter, and we intend to vigorously challenge it," he said.

The company's options, however, appear to be shrinking.

On Thursday, Humboldt County Superior Court Judge Bruce Watson shot down one of the company's challenges when he denied its demand for a mistrial based on juror misconduct.

Meanwhile, the company's ability to appeal is in question.

Typically, parties challenging a trial court decision are required to post 150% of the verdict as a bond. The company doesn't have the cash or credit to post the $1 billion-plus bond. It also likely faces bankruptcy if the jury's verdict stands up.

Both sides are currently in settlement negotiations, and legal analysts said there's a good chance that the sizable verdict will be reduced.

That is what happened in another high-profile nursing home verdict won in 1998 by Michael Thamer, who is now lead lawyer in the Skilled Healthcare lawsuit.

A Siskiyou County Superior Court jury awarded his client Reba Gregory $95 million after a nursing home attendant dropped her during a bed transfer, fracturing her hip and shoulder. Thamer convinced the jury that two attendants should have attempted the transfer and that Gregory's injuries were the result of staff shortages.

A judge later reduced the $95 million verdict to $3.1 million.


Read more: http://www.fresnobee.com/2010/08/28/2057712/huge-verdict-shakes-calif-nursing.html#ixzz149hyX5Ok

Abuse in Texas Nursing Home

MONTGOMERY COUNTY, Texas —The family of a former Texas legislator says he was abused while being treated in a local nursing home.

Donald Brown was a state representative from Galveston County in the 1960s.

As an attorney, Brown sought justice for over 33 years. In the 1980s, he was one of the lawyers who helped clear Clarence Brandley, who was wrongly convicted of rape and murder and spent nine years on death row before he was exonerated.

But Donald Brown’s daughter says what happened to her father at the end of his life was a crime and now he needs justice.

Brown died just days after leaving Willis Nursing and Rehabilitation in Montgomery County. Pictures taken of Brown after he spent two weeks at the facility shows he had horrible bed sores.

His daughter also claims he was over medicated.

"After about the first week there, he was so drugged when I or anyone else visited him, that we couldn’t wake him up," said Celia Brown.

Her father, who was 79 and in poor health, went to the Willis nursing home on August 19 to recover from hip surgery. He was rushed back to a hospital in Conroe on September 3 in respiratory distress and died three days later.

"With proper care he could have been rehabilitated and be alive, either in the nursing home or in a private care setting," said Brown.

Brown, believing her father was abused and neglected at the nursing home, filed a complaint with the Department of Aging and Disability Services, the Texas agency that inspects nursing homes. She also filed a criminal complaint with the Willis Police Department.

Accusations of neglect at nursing homes are not unusual. However, when nursing homes are investigated, the chances of anything happening to the facilities are slim.

In 2009, the Department of Aging and Disability Services investigated 16,000 complaints in the state’s 1,100 nursing homes. Out of all the investigations, the agency revoked one license and handed out 37 administrative penalties. Not one facility was suspended.

11 News also sifted through hundreds of pages of reports, detailing accusations made against Willis Nursing and Rehab. In the past five years, 45 people made more than 100 allegations of everything from neglect and abuse, to lack of care. Of those allegations, 11 News found three instances where the nursing home was cited for a violation.

"It’s actually very rare for us to take that severe an enforcement action," said Cecilia Federov, a spokesperson for the Department of Aging and Disability Services.

Federov said shutting down or closing a facility is rare because, when the agency finds problems, the nursing homes are given a chance to make improvements.

Federov said she would not agree that the nursing homes are given a lot of leeway during investigations.

"We have to keep in mind that moving a resident, forcing a resident to move into a different facility or closing a facility, so that there are fewer facilities in the state, that is very traumatic for the population we are serving," she said.

Federov said rigorous, unannounced inspections of nursing homes, like the one in Willis, are done once a year. She said the agency investigates every complaint.

11 News obtained a copy of the nursing homes skin evaluation sheet on Donald Brown. The evaluations showed he had four bed sores when he was admitted on August 19, all in the early stages. One of the sores was on his hip, two were near his tail bone, and another one was on his right heel.

That day the nurse indicated his heel was a stage-one bed sore, meaning the skin was intact.

But a picture of Brown’s heel the day he left the facility two weeks later showed the skin was gone. The pictures of Brown’s sores near his tail bone were equally as gruesome.

When shown the pictures by 11 News, Federov agreed they were disturbing.

"You know this is horrible, this wound is horrible, we would not say this is not a very tragic condition," she said.

Two weeks after 11 News’ interview with Federov, the state completed its investigation of Donald Brown’s case. The agency found that Willis Rehabilitation and Nursing had not broken any rules. The charge of over medicating was found to be unsubstantiated, as were the charges of neglect and failure to prevent bed sores.

A nurse said in the report that Brown’s right heel, the one that lost all the skin, "went bad very quickly." She also said Brown refused to turn and would rub his heel on the bed.

Brown’s daughter, Celia, was upset with the findings of the investigation.

"Wow, they are really under qualified to investigate, or choose not to see the truth in front of them," she wrote in an email to 11 News.

Valerie Chartier, an administrator of Willing Nursing and Rehabilitation, said she thinks the report spoke for itself.

"We remain committed to providing the finest care for our patients," she said in a written statement.

But when that care falls short, is the state doing enough to protect people’s loved ones? Celia Brown doesn’t think so. Her father once served the state of Texas. In return, she believes the state failed him.

article

Suit Alleging Neglect Filed

GALVESTON - Clay and Ricky Kilgore have filed a $5.5 million lawsuit against Dr. Firoozeh Saheb Kar, Baywind Village and Enterprise Ambulance for the death of Jeanie Kilgore.

The estate of Jeanie Kilgore argues that Kar knowingly and intentionally violated the doctor-patient trust when the physician discharged the woman without providing alternative medical care. The suit filed Sept. 30 in Galveston County District Court also alleges Baywind Village and Enterprise Ambulance deliberately assisted with the discharge.

Jeanie Kilgore died at Clear Lake Regional Hospital on Oct. 5, 2008.

The Kilgores placed Jeannie Kilgore in Baywind Village on Sept. 16, 2008. At the time, she was suffering from dementia and Parkinson's Disease, which greatly incapacitated her, according to the original complaint.

Court papers state that Kar discharged Jeannie Kilgore two weeks later even though her condition necessitated constant supervision by a qualified person. The suit claims Kar instructed Baywind Village and Enterprise Ambulance to transfer her to a facility in League City without her permission.

Her survivors allege there was no one at the home to care for her, especially when Jeannie Kilgore aspirated vomit on Oct. 2, 2008.

The suit says an employee found her struggling to breathe on the floor. She was rushed to Clear Lake Regional Hospital where she remained in a coma until her death three days later.

Friday, October 29, 2010

Nursing Home Abuse filed Against Legacy Health Care

A New York law firm has filed a class action lawsuit against Legacy Health Care on behalf of residents who resided at Legacy facility from at least 2007 to the present, citing neglect and endangerment to the welfare of residents. Legacy Health Care operates numerous elderly care facilities including Ridge View Manor LLC, Williamsville Suburban LLC, Williamsville View Manor Nursing Home, and Sheridan Manor. Richard Zacher, owner and administrator of the named facilities, is also listed as a defendant in the case, as are John Doe 1-200, which includes agents or employees of the above-mentioned facilities.
The class action lawsuit alleges deprivation of rights and benefits to which residents were legally entitled. Among the causes of action brought in this lawsuit, the named defendants are accused of failing to ensure a dignified existence for residents, inadequate staffing, and quality of care issues.

Legacy Health Care Facilities and those named under their umbrella are also accused of fraud, breach of contract and negligence. The complaint states that defendants have violated Section 2801-d of the Public Health Law by failing to staff facilities with adequate and qualified personnel to care for residents, compromising dignity of residents and quality of care. Plaintiffs' complaint also claims breach of contract, as individual plaintiffs entered into contracts with defendants in return for health care services for related residents.

Questions raised by plaintiffs in this complaint relate to fraudulent conduct by defendants, failure to employ sufficient staff to properly care for residents, engagement in unfair or deceptive conduct in regards to administration, management and operation of facilities, and failure of defendants to support and advance environments that provide dignity and proper quality of care to residents.

all plaintiffs in this lawsuit have the right to be compensated for damages and other costs related to breach of contract, fraud, and misrepresentation of care and services provided.

Class Action Lawsuit Filed Against Legacy Health Care Facilities in NY on Behalf of 6 Families

Nursing Home Abuse Suspect Sentenced

Brianna Broitzman, who was accused of physically and sexually abusing nursing home residents in Albert Lea, was sentenced to 180 days in jail Friday afternoon.

Broitzman was given a staggered sentence. She was immediately taken to jail where she will serve 60 days. Under the agreement she'll serve another 60 days in May and another 60 in October.

However, she will be allowed the file an "option to stay" the final 120 days of her sentence. Judge Steven Schwab called it the most complicated sentence he's ever given.

Broitzman will also be required to write letters of apology to the victims and will have to meet with the victim's families. She'll also have to undergo a psychiatric evaluation.

Broitzman was among several nursing aides accused of mistreating residents at the Good Samaritan Society in 2008 by groping, poking and taunting them.

She pleaded guilty to three gross misdeamenors using the Alford Plea, which means she claimed she was innocent, but acknowledged there was enough evidence to convict her.

Her co-defendant, Ashton Larson, is scheduled for court in December.

http://kaaltv.com/article/stories/S1803981.shtml?cat=10219

Monday, October 11, 2010

Standing Up For Seniors

How the Civil Justice System Protects Elderly Americans
Nursing homes are now big business. Corporate chains are anticipating a flood of baby boomers moving into their facilities over the next few years. This increased emphasis on profits has led to a distressing rise in neglected and abused seniors. Between 2000 and 2008, instances of “immediate jeopardy”—violations likely to result in serious harm or even death—rose 22 percent. More than 90 percent of all nursing homes were guilty of at least one violation.

There are many laws and regulations aimed at protecting seniors. Yet government agencies, non-profit watchdogs and media organizations consistently report that serious problems exist in our nation’s nursing homes.

The same is true of insurance companies that mislead and defraud vulnerable seniors. Insurance industry regulators protest that they can do nothing. Even when they do raise their hands, they more often than not strike deals to keep fines to a minimum and settlements secret.

With the regulatory and legislative bodies unable to cope with a groundswell of neglect and abuse, the civil justice system has stepped into the breach. Attorneys who represent our nation’s seniors, and their families, play a critical role in uncovering abuse and neglect, and are the most effective force to compel corporate nursing homes to fix their conduct.

http://www.justice.org/cps/rde/xchg/justice/hs.xsl/13464.htm

http://www.justice.org/cps/rde/xbcr/justice/StandingUpForSeniors.pdf

Friday, October 01, 2010

How to Pick a Nursing Home: Talk to CNA's, Staff

While looking at nursing homes for my mother, I always asked the tour guides if I could talk to the nurses’ aides. This seemed to me a logical request. After all, these were the women — and they were all women — who would spend the most time with my mother, who would notice small changes that raised big questions, who would make her feel cared for. Or not.

“They don’t do that,” I was told almost everywhere I visited.

I soon realized why. In casual conversations in hallways and dining rooms at more than a dozen facilities, I found only one nurses’ aide who had been on the job more than six months. I was witnessing in real life one of the most dismal statistics in long-term care: More than 70 percent of nurses’ aides, or certified nursing assistants, change jobs in a given year.

Then came the tour guide who didn’t say no. “No one has ever asked that before, but why not?” the marketing director of a New Jersey nursing home said in response to my request. He said he would ask three aides then on break if they wanted to talk to me. They said yes.

I asked how long they had worked there. One said 12 years; another, 8. The third answered: “I’m the baby. I’ve been here four years.”

I decided this was the place for my mother. These women used the word “we” when talking about the nursing home, making clear that they felt a sense of ownership. And it seemed significant that the marketing director asked their permission before allowing me to impose on their break time. Moreover, he trusted them enough to leave me alone with them in the break room.


That was 10 years ago. I do not know exactly what I would find today, but the overall situation has not changed. The reasons for the high turnover rate among nurses’ aides are the same as they were then: low wages ($10.48 an hour on average), poor benefits, high injury rates and lack of respect on the job.

What has changed is that the industry, the federal government and the states have all identified the turnover rate as a crisis in long-term care, particularly with demand poised to soar as the baby boom generation ages. Researchers have found that high turnover in a facility corresponds with poor quality of care — more bedsores and more use of restraints, catheters and mood-altering drugs. That is, more reliance on medicine and technology, less on relationships.

“Cycling in aides who don’t know you is very disorienting and upsetting, and the resident is the one who suffers on the quality end,” said Peggy Powell, a senior staffer at PHI, formerly known as the Paraprofessional Healthcare Institute, a nonprofit group focused on improving the front-line work force in long-term care.

In nursing homes with high turnover rates, certified nursing assistants tend to leave within three months, often because of inadequate training and support to juggle multiple frail, ailing residents at a time, according to Robyn Stone, senior vice president for research at the American Association of Homes and Services for the Aging. Once aides leave, everyone else must pick up their caseloads, and the stress of the job rises.

Culture change initiatives are under way in nursing homes around the country to make aides’ jobs more fulfilling — not so much through better pay, but by offering better training, more responsibility and more respect from superiors. The aides at my mother’s nursing home had all this, plus health and pension benefits.

Ericka Dickens had been there for nine years when she became my mother’s aide. She had the patience and experience to navigate my mother’s stormy moods as her dementia worsened, to notice immediately when she was feeling weak or sick. Sometimes I would arrive in the early morning to find Ms. Dickens sitting beside my mother, holding her hand and talking to her.

I hadn’t seen Ms. Dickens since shortly after my mother died six years ago. Recently I called to see if she still worked at the nursing home. I discovered that she is now in her 20th year, currently assigned to the physical therapy department. I visited her there and found her assisting a resident who looked up at her at one point and said: “Oh, Ericka, you look so good. You always look so good. You’re a good friend.”

I asked what made her want to stay in the job all these years. She said she always felt respected and supported, but the anchor for her and others is the bond with residents. (There were five other aides from my mother’s era on the afternoon shift that day, including one who had been there for 25 years.)

“We have reminiscences about this person and that person, how we used to love this one and how we used to love that one,” Ms. Dickens said. “They become your family. A few weeks ago, someone passed away, and Winnie and I went to the wake. Her daughter was so happy when she saw us, she started crying. And you feel: ‘Yes, I did something. I’m part of something.’ It’s really fulfilling.”


http://newoldage.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/07/27/one-way-to-judge-a-nursing-home/

Monday, September 27, 2010

Lawyer: Flap in McCourt case may cost firm millions

A Boston attorney who handles legal malpractice cases said an error in a postnuptial agreement could cost the Bingham McCutchen firm millions.

“If I was a client and I lost the division of property assets based on faulty paperwork by another law firm, I would explore the possibility of going after that law firm,” said Bernard J. Hamill, a legal malpractice attorney in Boston.

At issue in the divorce case of Los Angeles Dodgers owner Frank McCourt and his wife, Jamie, is the wording of the agreement signed by the couple in happier times in 2004. Three copies of the documents reportedly use the word “inclusive” - making Frank McCourt sole owner of the team - while three other copies say “exclusive,” which would make Jamie McCourt a co-owner.

“It seems odd to have the whole issue turn on a word, include or exclude,” Hamill said. “Without seeing the volume of paperwork, it sounds like it could be a drafting error.”

Larry Silverstein of Bingham McCutchen, who once represented Jamie and Frank McCourt, denies he committed fraud when he switched a key portion of the postnup.

Silverstein was on the witness stand yesterday for the third consecutive day in the couple’s divorce trial. He rejected an allegation from Jamie McCourt’s attorneys that he and Frank McCourt engaged in fraud when the correction was made without telling their client. Frank McCourt also has denied the claim.

Silverstein says he fixed a mistake in the agreement to give McCourt sole ownership.

Jamie McCourt is seeking a stake in the Dodgers under California’s community property law.

The trial is slated to take a break today so attorneys can go into mediation, according to a person familiar with the case.


Lawyer: Flap in McCourt case may cost firm millions

Take care to read the fine print, do research

Take care to read the fine print, do research

COUNTY NURSING HOME: State finds fault

The Illinois Department of Public Health found three irregularities at the La Salle County Nursing Home in September.

In the first case, a staff member did not report suspected verbal abuse of a 100-year-old resident by a certified nurse's aide. According to witnesses who spoke to the IDPH, the aide acted like a "warden in a jail" and the aide's voice was "elevated and rough." One witness said the aide yelled at the resident, "Don't you dare stand up," which further agitated the resident. This happened the evening of Aug. 1. The aide accused of the abuse worked a double shift that day from 6:45 a.m. to 11:15 p.m.

Another CNA was suspended three days for not reporting the other aide's verbal abuse. The IDPH said Thursday the process of taking action against the aide connected to the abuse is under way. La Salle County Board member Gary Small, R-Utica, who is chairman of the board's nursing home committee, previously said the aide was not a county employee, but rather was a temporary worker from an agency that provides aides when needed.

In the second case, a resident had an allergy to bananas and is not to eat the fruit. However, Aug. 10, the resident was served banana cake, ate it and had to be taken to a hospital emergency room. A staff member believed the food was spice cake.

In the third case, a registered nurse did not promptly perform cardiopulmonary resuscitation on a resident July 17, instead leaving the resident and going to get help. The resident died and the nurse was fired. The nurse had been a nurse two years and the incident happened at the end of a 24-hour shift for her, according to an IDPH document.

The administrator at the time of these incidents was Dr. Amjad Hussain, who resigned Aug. 13 after six months on the job. The current administrator, Chris Csernus, took over Aug. 24. Csernus could not be reached for comment.


LA SALLE COUNTY NURSING HOME: State finds faults

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Seniors for sale | Hundreds of adult homes conceal abuse, neglect | Seattle Times Newspaper

The explosion that had ravaged Audree Hopkins' face, burning off both earlobes and the end of her nose, was a mystery.

Seattle police Detective Suzanne Moore had her suspicions. But by the time Moore was called to the West Seattle elder-care home to investigate, five days had passed since the blast and nearly every shred of evidence was gone.

The detective questioned workers who had cared for Hopkins, a stroke- and emphysema-hobbled 68-year-old who had lived in the TLC Adult Family Home for six months at the time of the March 2007 accident. The caregivers' stories, all seemingly synchronized, shot down Moore's theory.

No, they said, none of them had handed the partially blind Hopkins a lit cigarette, though she was a smoker and unable to light one herself.

No, they said, Hopkins was not connected to an oxygen pump at the time, though she used one at night for breathing.

Moore left the adult family home on Southwest Thistle Street determined to get answers. She caught a break when she learned from Fire Department reports that responders saw an oxygen pump on the deck. And then she discovered that Hopkins' husband, Larry, had retrieved his wife's melted wheelchair, damaged oxygen pump and burned clothing for safekeeping.

Moore sent the evidence to the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives for testing. Experts there traced a trail of fire from Hopkins' nose down to her sternum — the same path as her oxygen breathing apparatus. The source of ignition: a cigarette.

Moore had been right. She had been deceived by the three caregivers. Further, the TLC owner, Antonia Malla, had failed to contact the state Department of Social and Health Services (DSHS) immediately after the incident occurred, as required by law.

In fact, a Seattle Times investigation has found, such cover-ups by adult family homes are not unusual. The Times found that over the past five years, at least 357 of the adult family homes in this state have concealed cases of abuse or neglect of their residents. Many of those cases involved serious injury or death.

In dozens of these cases, untrained or unlicensed caregivers mishandled residents' medications, sometimes giving them fatal overdoses. In other cases, residents became ill after being denied basic care and hygiene. A Seattle man died from infection after his catheter was not changed or sterilized for four months.

In many cases, these caregivers tried to conceal abuse or neglect by forging medical records, lying to state investigators or threatening residents with eviction if they provided witness statements.

Worse yet, The Times found, even when DSHS was notified of an incident of abuse or neglect, as required by state law, the agency many times failed to adequately investigate.

Hands-off approach by state officials

Adult family homes are private residences that provide rooms and care for up to six people who can no longer live on their own. They are marketed as lower-cost alternatives to nursing homes, allowing seniors and other frail people to live in cozy settings and familiar neighborhoods, with more freedom and personalized care.

The homes' owners are given freedom, as well. To encourage this new industry over the past two decades, Washington state imposed few regulations — no requirements for a minimum number of employees or even, for many years, liability insurance.

This laissez-faire approach has succeeded in spawning nearly 3,000 adult family homes across the state. Many are successful businesses, with residents' fees typically starting at $3,000 a month and rising to $7,000 for the nicer homes.

But the state's approach also has resulted in dangerous conditions going unchecked in many homes, the Times investigation found. Unqualified caregivers remain at work and substandard homes remain in business, an analysis of DSHS inspection files from 2005 to 2009 revealed.

Washington law requires mandatory reporting of suspected abuse or neglect of vulnerable adults in nursing homes and adult family homes. State legislators passed that requirement in 1984, intending to provide a wide safety net — if one caregiver failed to report abuse or neglect, someone else along the chain of care would be required to do it.

But unlike busy, professionally staffed nursing homes, adult homes often have only one link in that chain — a caregiver, with little training, working alone.

The Times found that many homes routinely violated this law but rarely faced stiff punishments. Even when adult family homes and their workers have been caught trying to hide problems, most have kept their state-issued licenses.

Page Ulrey, a King County senior deputy prosecutor who specializes in elder-abuse cases, said studies have estimated that for every six incidents of elder abuse, only one is reported.

"There is a huge issue in the lack of reporting," she said.

In the case of Audree Hopkins, nobody immediately reported the tragedy — not the owner of TLC, not her employees, not the seven firefighters and paramedics called to the scene, not the doctors and nurses at the hospital.

The owner finally did contact DSHS three days after the incident, leaving a message on an answering machine at night. The agency then took two days to contact Seattle police.

Once Detective Moore nailed down the cause, she referred the case to the King County Prosecuting Attorney's Office. Ulrey filed felony criminal mistreatment charges against a TLC caregiver and owner Malla, as well as a misdemeanor charge of failure to report neglect against Malla.

The caregiver, Milagros Mendoza, was convicted in 2009 of reckless endangerment and received 30 days in jail. After the judge dismissed Malla's felony charge, she pleaded guilty to failure to report, and received probation and 240 hours of community service.

She continues to assert her innocence, however, insisting: "I didn't do anything wrong. My caregivers didn't do anything. The resident caused it. There was no oxygen in use."

Malla was the first adult home owner in Washington history to be criminally charged — let alone be convicted — of failure to report.

DSHS, which is required to inspect each of the state's homes once every 18 months, finds on average about 20 failure-to-report violations each month, mostly by reviewing residents' files and taking note of any reportable injuries.

Even so, officials acknowledge, the agency rarely passes on the evidence to law enforcement for further action.

DSHS' tepid response highlights an inherent conflict within the agency: While it polices adult family homes, it also seeks to foster the industry as a less-expensive, more-appropriate housing option for seniors.

The TLC case illustrates the conflict in stark terms.

After Seattle police began investigating the flash explosion, DSHS revoked owner Malla's license to operate TLC. She appealed. DSHS rescinded its revocation "in order to control the expense and uncertainty of litigation." Malla was allowed to do a "voluntary surrender" of her license and then reapply in two years instead of the customary 20.

But losing the license for TLC did not put Malla out of business. DSHS allowed her to keep licenses on two other Seattle homes. When TLC closed, all but one of its residents went into Malla's other two homes.

DSHS shelving evidence of crimes

DSHS officials acknowledge that adult-home caregivers have routinely failed to report neglect. In the past 22 months, DSHS investigators have uncovered 425 instances of failure to report, each of which resulted in administrative, noncriminal fines and other sanctions, said Kathy Leitch, assistant secretary for aging and disability services.

However, in analyzing state files for 2007-09, The Times found at least 53 cases in which DSHS officials had failed to adequately investigate reports of neglect or to forward evidence of criminal acts to police or prosecutors.

Among cases that DSHS knew about but did not refer to police:

• A witness inside a Bellevue adult home described how two residents were neglected and had developed life-threatening pressure sores.

• A health-care worker who visited a Renton adult home provided evidence of a resident who was "soaked in urine," with blood draining from two open wounds.

• A health-care provider revealed that a resident from a Shoreline adult home had lapsed into a coma after untrained caregivers failed to swiftly provide cardiopulmonary resuscitation.

DSHS officials say many complaints were difficult to pursue because the tipsters were anonymous or the alleged violations occurred weeks or months earlier.

But the agency also failed to notify police even after its investigations found evidence of crimes.

For instance, DSHS officials never notified police about the 2006 death of Nadra McSherry, 80, who died from untreated pressure sores, which developed at a Tacoma adult home.

Caregivers at Narrows View Manor, owned by Arlie Leno, were aware for weeks of the advanced wounds, which were open to the bone, but failed to notify family members or seek emergency help, DSHS found. The Times profiled McSherry's case earlier this year but only recently learned that her death was not reported to police.

In another case this year, DSHS found that a Seattle adult home had failed to provide proper care to a resident who had suffered a broken arm, allowing him to suffer for nearly two weeks. DSHS levied a $1,200 civil fine against the home in June. But it wasn't until The Times inquired about the case that the agency reported the violation to Seattle police.

While the agency has referred all cases of physical abuse, it has been inconsistent in passing along cases involving neglect. Assistant Secretary Leitch acknowledged that neglect cases represent a "gray area" in which DSHS investigators make subjective judgments. "We're looking at whether we should send more referrals to law enforcement and not make subjective decisions as to whether a crime has been committed," she said.

Elder abuse easier to ignore

Abuse of elders is often ignored, or swept under the rug in the manner that domestic violence was decades ago, as a private affair that does not require public intervention, says Ulrey, the King County prosecutor who specializes in such cases. She said few people are advocating for elderly victims.

"We don't have a body or population of victims who are banging on people's doors or angry or furious about what's happened to them, because most of our victims are dead," she said.

Law-enforcement agencies have been reluctant to investigate because elderly victims who do survive abuse are usually incapacitated with dementia or other maladies and are often difficult witnesses. Juries are reluctant to convict, often sympathizing with caregivers who perform tedious, difficult tasks that few want to do.

At the core, Ulrey said, "there is a tremendous amount of denial in this country that elder abuse exists and occurs. I think many people, and I'm certainly guilty sometimes of this, too, don't want to believe it's as bad a problem as it is.

"And they don't want to think of themselves as getting old. They don't want to think of themselves as dying. They don't want to think of their parents as ever being in a situation where they could be neglected or exploited. So we've kind of tended to box it away and not deal with it. The same way we tend to box away much of our elderly population in nursing homes and adult family homes."

In November, Ulrey and Seattle police, including Moore, will conduct training classes on mandatory reporting of elder crimes, funded by a two-year, $400,000 grant provided by the U.S. Justice Department.

Meanwhile, Moore has started training Seattle officers on the topic at morning roll call. Police cruisers will display window stickers that advertise an abuse hotline telephone number.

Ulrey says she believes the training will result in better reporting of abuse, and more convictions. "We see a lot of cases being overlooked," she said.

After explosion, a difficult recovery

Audree Hopkins was taking classes to be a travel agent when she suffered a stroke in 1990, which paralyzed her left side. Her health went downhill. By the end of the decade, she had emphysema, heart disease and was blind in one eye. After stints in long-term care facilities, including a nursing home, she moved to the TLC home in 2006. After the explosion, she spent three months at Harborview Medical Center. She underwent numerous surgeries to save her life and, later, to reconstruct her face.

Now 71, she lives in a West Seattle nursing home, Park Place West. She is unable to walk. She lacks the muscle control to hold a cup of water to her lips. She cannot even drink water without a thickener; otherwise, she might choke.

But when she recently had a visitor, she preened over a new hairdo and asked how she looked.

When a young physical therapist urged Audree to bend her legs on a cycling machine, she quipped, "Easy for you to say."

She maintains a love-hate relationship with cigarettes. She doesn't remember the explosion.

Her husband, Larry, 73, a retired Boeing engineer, visits at least five days a week, sometimes twice a day. "Somebody has to be here for her," he said.

They take frequent strolls outside the nursing home, she in her wheelchair and always accompanied by an oxygen pump or canister. They often relive past times, such as when she was a student at Holy Rosary High School and starred as Anna in a production of "The King and I."

After the explosion, Audree's medical bills skyrocketed. Larry talked to a lawyer about suing Malla, but DSHS revealed that it had granted Malla a waiver from the state-mandated liability insurance. She didn't have any.

Finding no one with deep pockets to pursue, the lawyer declined to take the case.

Hopkins faced a financial dilemma. Even with Medicare and pension benefits, he quickly would spend himself down to bankruptcy and lose his home. Or he could qualify his wife for Medicaid, the government health-insurance program for the poor, but to do so he would have to divorce her. His Boeing pension payments exceed Medicaid's limit for allowable income.


Seniors for sale | Hundreds of adult homes conceal abuse, neglect | Seattle Times Newspaper

Proposal could help crackdown on abuse & neglect in nursing homes

Proposal could help crackdown on abuse & neglect in nursing homes