Nursing home fails to report missing resident for 2 days

I doubt that the facility even knew he was missing.  Staten Island Live had a story about a resident who walked away from the facility on Friday but the facility failed to either recognize that he was missing or failed to contact the police or his family for 48 hours.  This is outrageous but not a surprise knowing how short staffed most facilities are these days.

The man, identified as Richard Constable, 66, walked off the grounds of the 200-bed facility sometime Friday but staffers didn't call police until Sunday morning, when a therapist finally noticed his patient was missing a session.

"They felt they would get a better [police] response if they waited until Sunday," said Claudia Hutton, spokeswoman for the state Health Department that licensed the facility. "We were surprised by that. You call the police as soon as you realize a person is missing."  Hutton, of the Health Department, said Lakeside probably would be given a citation in the case, and called the response "inappropriate policy."  Probably?  Why not definitely?

Lakeside has drawn complaints from neighbors who say the residents there are publicly drunk, urinate on lawns and litter properties with trash and cigarette butts. But Anthony Caccamo, who lives across the street, said the patients aren't the problem.

"It's the staff; they're just nasty, miserable people," said Caccamo, 35. "They don't care."

 

Another resident missing from nursing home

The Tampa Tribune had an article about a resident missing from a nursing home.  How can the facility allow a vulnerable elderly person to wander way from the facility?  Who is supervising the residents? Why didn't the door alarm go off?  Or did the staff fail to respond to the alarm?  Were they short-staffed?

A search is under way for Carl Seiden who disappeared from The Fountains, his assisted living facility in North Tampa.  Seiden suffers from dementia.  The sheriff's office describe him as 6 feet tall with a thin build and beard. He walks with a cane and was last seen wearing brown pants and a beige shirt, the sheriff's office said.

Anyone with information on his whereabouts is asked to call the sheriff's office at (813) 247-0929.
 

Mystery surrounds death of resident found in utility closet

Rome News Tribune has a story about a male resident found dead in the nursing home's utility closet.  Typically, these closets are locked and only certain staff members have access.  No one knows how the resident got into the closet or how he died.  

The man had been missing from a Georgia nursing home for two weeks but was found dead Wednesday in a utility closet at the facility.  The body of Walter T. Heath was found in a closet near the dining area of the Tara at Thunderbolt Nursing and Rehabilitation Center.

Heath had been missing since 5 p.m. April 16. He admitted himself into the Thunderbolt facility in February.  After he disappeared, the facility's staff and Heath's family members grew concerned about him.   Heath's wheechair was left near the dining area the day he disappeared, not far from the utility closet where his body was found Wednesday morning.

Hopefully, the autopsy and investigation will reveal what truly happened.

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