Fines for neglect

The L.A. Times reported that State officials have fined two nursing homes in Orange County for providing care so inadequate that it caused the deaths of two patients.

In one case, a woman died from dehydration.  This is clearly a preventable death.  The nursing home failed to give a resident sufficient fluids, causing her to suffer dehydration and acute kidney failure.   A doctor ordered that the patient's fluid intake and urine output be monitored during every shift.  A review of the patient's intake and output of fluids was blank or illegible.  The woman's condition had deteriorated so much that she was transferred to a hospital, where she was diagnosed with a urinary tract infection, dehydration and an "altered mental status."  

The patient died six days later, on Christmas Day.  Alamitos West Health Care Center in Los Alamitos was fined $100,000

 In the other, staff failed to provide CPR to a man suffering a heart attack because they mistakenly believed he was under orders not to be resuscitated.  A registered nurse supervisor did not call 911 as a patient was dying "because she thought the patient had orders" not to be resuscitated. In fact, the patient's medical record included an advance directive form from a family member on which was marked the option, "I DO WANT C.P.R." in an emergency situation.  A licensed vocational nurse called to inform a family member that the patient had died. The nurse told the family member that the patient was dead and that paramedics were not called because the facility had orders not to resuscitate the patient.  The family member told the nurse to hang up and call 911.  By the time paramedics arrived, they found the patient in bed with no heartbeat. He was covered with a sheet with no signs that CPR had been initiated.

State officials levied an $80,000 fine on the Huntington Valley Healthcare Center in Huntington Beach.

 

Nursing home neglects resident, dehydration led to her death

Knoxnews.com had an article about the death of Hillcrest North nursing home patient Linda Darlene Carter.  The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation labeled the death as "suspicious" after the Knox County medical examiner labeled the death a homicide, blaming poor treatment. TBI spokeswoman Kristin Helm said  "We are looking into it as a suspicious death."  "We met with the (district attorney general) and he asked us to look into it more, to review it and come back and meet with him again."

Carter was 46 when she died March 27, 2008, at the University of Tennessee Medical Center after a nine-day stay at Hillcrest North.   The autopsy report by Knox County Medical Examiner Darinka Mileusnic-Polchan concluded, "Because of the nursing home neglect, the manner of death is homicide." The report states, "Linda Carter died of dehydration due to inadequate care following multiple blunt force injuries due to (an) automobile accident."

Carter suffered injuries including a closed head injury in a Feb. 8, 2008, car crash and was recovering at the University of Tennessee Medical Center before being transferred to Hillcrest on March 18, 2008, to continue her recovery, according to the March 9 lawsuit against Hillcrest Healthcare North and Hillcrest Healthcare LLC.

Hillcrest "failed to provide adequate fluids for the decedent to survive, not to mention heal and/or attempt to heal from her injuries.," the lawsuit claims. The suit also alleges that Hillcrest "failed to maintain accurate medical records, develop and implement a nursing care plan regarding her condition during her stay, and to properly track the progress and treatment of her health care issues."

The lawsuit was filed  "just to prevent it from happening to anyone else, to make sure no one else's mother, grandmother or grandfather" go through the same thing.   "You expect better care under someone who is professional. You would expect to be taken care of - not neglected."

 

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