Monday, March 02, 2015

Elderly Abused at 1 in 3 Nursing Homes: Report - ABC News

Reports of serious, physical, sexual and verbal abuse are "numerous" among the nation's nursing homes, according to a congressional report released today.
The study, prepared by the minority (Democratic and Independent) staff of the Special Investigations Division of the House Government Reform Committee, finds that 30 percent of nursing homes in the United States — 5,283 facilities — were cited for almost 9,000 instances of abuse over a recent two-year period, from January 1999 to January 2001.
Common problems included untreated bedsores, inadequate medical care, malnutrition, dehydration, preventable accidents, and inadequate sanitation and hygiene, the report said.
Many of the abuse violations caused harm to the residents, the report said.
In 1,601 cases, the abuse violations were serious enough "to cause actual harm to residents or to place the residents in immediate jeopardy of death or serious injury," it said.
"What we have found is shocking," says Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., the committee's minority leader, who instructed the staff to do the study.
Kelley Queale, director of communications for the California Association of Health Facilities, however, says reports such as the one released today can be misleading, since stringent regulations require reporting even the most minor of incidents, such as one resident slapping another.
"That inflates the figures and makes it sound a lot worse than the reality is," she says. "We believe that nursing homes are providing the best care they can in a difficult environment."
Grotesque Abuse
In some reported cases, a member of the nursing home's staff was accused of committing physical or sexual abuse. In others, staff were cited for failing to protect people from abuse by other residents.
The report documents instances of residents being punched, slapped, choked or kicked by staff members or other residents, causing injuries such as fractured bones or lacerations.Elderly Abused at 1 in 3 Nursing Homes: Report - ABC News:



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Monday, February 23, 2015

Man charged after abuse investigation


Olean police have arrested an Olean man on allegations of physically abusing his mentally and physically disabled adult stepdaughter. 

Ronald L. “Ronnie” Miller, 59, of 1526 Martin St., was charged at 1:33 p.m. Wednesday with first-degree endangering the welfare of an incompetent or physically disabled person, a class E felony; and third-degree assault, a class A misdemeanor. 

Explaining the charges Thursday afternoon, Olean Police Capt. Robert Blovsky said investigators believe Miller lost his temper while trying to calm his “severely disabled” 27-year-old stepdaughter between 2 and 3 a.m. Monday, allegedly hitting her with his hand and causing “serious bruising” to her buttocks. Man charged after abuse investigation - Olean Times Herald: News - Man charged after abuse investigation: News:

Monday, February 16, 2015

Jurors rule in favor of family in nursing home abuse

Jurors rule in favor of family in nursing home abuse lawsuit | Oklahoma City - OKC - KOCO.com: "Friday evening, the jury at the Federal Courthouse decided the family of the victim is entitled to monetary damages.

The family was awarded $1.2M for emotional distress and $10,000 in punitive damages.

Shocking video was taken inside the Quail Creek Nursing and Rehabilitation Center in Oklahoma City in April 2012. It shows two aides appearing to stuff a latex glove into the mouth of 96-year-old Eryetha Mayberry as she sits in her wheelchair.

The undercover video helped change laws in Oklahoma. Families can legally hide cameras inside their loved one’s room.

“In my mind, there’s absolutely no question that these aides had abused other residents before this," said Wes Bledsoe, an advocate for nursing home reform who has worked closely with the family. "This was not the first time that they had ever abused a resident and if it had not been for that camera they would have continued to abuse other residents.”"



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Monday, January 26, 2015

NY Attorney General investigating nursing home Assault


The state attorney general is investigating how a Marine veteran suffered horrific injuries in a state-run nursing home in Queens.
The probe was launched last week after The Post reported that a resident, 87, was gashed on the head Sept. 21 and again in the arm Nov. 24 at the State Veterans’ Home in St. Albans.
His jagged arm slashes, which appeared to be defensive wounds, required 23 stitches.
The nursing home could not explain what happened to Brogan, who suffers from dementia, in either incident. Attorney general investigating nursing home attack | New York Post

Monday, January 19, 2015

Drug Problems In Nursing Homes

It's one of the worst fears we have for our parents or for ourselves: that we, or they, will end up in a nursing home, drugged into a stupor. And that fear is not entirely unreasonable. Almost 300,000 nursing home residents are currently receiving antipsychotic drugs, usually to suppress the anxiety or aggression that can go with Alzheimer's disease and other dementia.Old And Overmedicated: The Real Drug Problem In Nursing Homes : Shots - Health News : NPR:

Saturday, January 17, 2015

Former judge pleads guilty, admits taking bribe to cut jury verdict from $5.2M to $1M

A former Arkansas judge waived indictment and pleaded guilty Friday to a federal criminal information charging him with accepting a bribe for reducing a nursing home negligence verdict from $5.2 million to $1 million.
Michael A. Maggio, 53, admitted being “improperly influenced” in the nursing home case by campaign contributions in 2013 for his planned run for an appellate court seat, according to Arkansas Business, the Log Cabin Democrat and the Times Record   Former judge pleads guilty, admits taking bribe to cut jury verdict from $5.2M to $1M:




Monday, January 12, 2015

Nurses Steal Nursing Home patients' Medicines

Nurse "Z" spent years stealing drugs from patients in Va. as a nursing home director at more than one facility, and sick people went without narcotics.
Later she had another job and was stealing fentanyl, oxycodone, morphine. By late 2003, with state monitoring starting to make it more difficult for her to take nursing home patients' drugs at will, she hatched a new plan.
Z went back "to visit" people at a Nursing Home in Richmond, where she once worked and had been fired. But she really was going back for drugs, according to later board findings. The registered nurse was peeling pain medicine patches off of residents' chests, scraping the narcotic off, ingesting it and sticking the useless bandages back on.
At the time, the Board of Nursing knew she was addicted — they had for years — and had allowed her to stay licensed. At the bottom, deeply in the grip of drugs and close to a suicide attempt, she still could have, during a window of several months before the state took action, applied for another nursing job in Virginia with her valid license and treated patients.
A statewide investigation by The News Leader discovered Zientek among 900 nurses publicly disciplined by the licensing board from 2007 to mid-2013 for drug theft and use at work.
Investigation: Addicted nurses steal patients' drugs

Thursday, January 08, 2015

Some Nursing Home Staff Stealing Drugs

According to The Newsleader:
"Bonnie Zientek spent years stealing drugs from nursing patients in Richmond, as a nursing director at more than one facility, and sick people went without medicine.
She had another job and was stealing fentanyl, oxycodone, morphine. She also went back to visit people at a Nursing Home in Richmond, where she once worked and had been fired. But she really was going back for drugs, according to later board findings."
 Investigation: Addicted nurses steal patients' drugs:

Friday, January 02, 2015

New York investigating nursing home attack

The NY attorney general is investigating how a elderly man suffered  injuries in a nursing home in Queens. The residents jagged arm slashes, which appeared to be defensive wounds, required 23 stitches. The nursing home could not explain what happened to him, who suffers from dementia, in either incident. Attorney general investigating nursing home attack | New York Post:

Sunday, December 28, 2014

Nursing Homes Cheated Medicaid Through Neglect, N.M. Says - Law360

New Mexico’s attorney general on Thursday sued nursing home chain Preferred Care Partners Management Group LP for allegedly defrauding Medicaid by maintaining low staffing levels that resulted in nursing home residents wallowing in filth.
The lawsuit in state court alleges violations of the New Mexico Fraud Against Taxpayers Act and the New Mexico Medicaid Fraud Act, which include potential per-violation penalties of $10,000 that are similar to penalties found in the federal False Claims Act.
The allegations span 2007 to present, partly covering time before Preferred Care acquired the  nursing home.
Nursing Homes Cheated Medicaid Through Neglect, N.M. Says - Law360

Wednesday, December 24, 2014

New Mexico sues nursing home chain over care and staff

New Mexico's Attorney General Gary King sued one of the nation's largest nursing home chains over inadequate resident care and poor staffing practices.
The purpose of this action is to send a message to nursing homes that failure to provide the care that patients need and that nursing homes are paid for will have legal consequences.
The attorney general is alleging that the present company, was profiting by skimping on staff "at the expense of the physical well-being of vulnerable nursing home residents."
New Mexico sues nursing home chain over care and staff

Thursday, December 18, 2014

Kentucky nursing home owner wants to limit elder-abuse lawsuits

On separate occasions in 2009, two male residents allegedly sexually abused  91-year-old Mae Campbell once within sight of a nursing supervisor. The state said the nursing home “failed to protect” its residents from roving sexual predators in their midst. The home and its administrator were spared a criminal trial by paying a $20,000 fine.
Hazard Health Rehab also was home for Glenda Lykins, a dementia patient who tended to wander and fell 11 times, finally breaking a hip in 2011 before she was moved out. Home it was, too, for Anna Ambrose, who died there in 2006 with a gaping pressure ulcer and bedsores. Eastern Kentucky nursing home owner pushes for roadblocks to elder-abuse lawsuits | Local News | Kentucky.com:

Friday, December 12, 2014

Safety studied at nursing home after resident dies from window fall

According to  the Division of Licensing and Regulatory Services of the Department of Health and Human Services  an investigation of St. Joseph Nursing & Rehabilitation Center in Frenchville on Nov. 19 and 20 found deficiencies in care that resulted in DHHS issuing a finding that conditions at the facility placed patients in “immediate jeopardy.”

The death of an elderly female nursing home resident of the 42-patient facility, which resulted from an nursing home accident at the residential care center on Nov. 14, prompted the investigation. The resident died at Northern Maine Medical Center on Nov. 15 because of injuries suffered after falling from a second-story window in the St. Joseph nursing office. Safety studied at Frenchville nursing home after resident dies after fall from window — Health — Bangor Daily News — BDN Maine:

Sunday, December 07, 2014

Video Proposed to Safeguard Nursing Home Residents

One of New Jersey's legislators want to protect nursing home patients by giving them the right to install videos in their rooms to help prevent elder abuse.
Not surprisingly, it has drawn strong opposition from nursing homes, who see it as a violation of residents privacy although that argument seems specious when the request is made by the resident!  The NJ bill is A-3883.

Legislation Would Let Families Record Activities in Nursing-Home Rooms - NJ Spotlight:

Friday, November 28, 2014

Summerton woman charged in alleged nursing home abuse - Post and Courier

A 24-year-old Summerton woman is charged with abuse and neglect of two vulnerable elder adults at a Sumter nursing home.
The Sumter Item reported Thursday that Andria Martrice Lawson was arrested Monday and charged with one count of abuse of a vulnerable adult and one count of neglect of a vulnerable adult.
Deputies say they were called to the Sumter Valley Health and Rehabilitation Center on July 25.
A 70-year-old woman told deputies Lawson allegedly struck her in the chest when she asked Lawson to change her clothes. A 71-year-old man told deputies Lawson allegedly abandoned him nude from the waist down in a wheelchair." Summerton woman charged in alleged nursing home abuse - Post and Courier: