Use of Antipsychotics

McKnight's also ran an article about the recent studies that prove the off label use and over use of dangerous antipsychotics to elderly and vulnerable patients. Antipsychotic medication use is still widespread in nursing homes, even after the federal government issued a “black box” warning on the drugs in 2005 according to two new studies.

The drugs in question include clozapine, risperidone, olanzapine and paliperidone. Doctors prescribe these drugs, which are designed to treat bipolar disorder and schizophrenia, off-label for residents with dementia. Both studies appeared in Monday's issue of the Archives of Internal Medicine.
 

Overmedication in nursing homes

NY Times had a great article on the too common practice of overmedicating residents in nursing homes.  Nursing homes often chemically restrain residents because it is easier:  No complaints, no call bells, no requests.   Management can then staff less people on certain shifts especially at night.  Paula Spann wrote a great article.

Within three months of admission, a team of University of South Florida researchers determined, 71 percent of Medicaid residents in Florida nursing homes were receiving a psychoactive medication — an antidepressant or anti-psychotic, or dementia drugs — even though most were not taking such drugs in the months before they moved in and didn’t have psychiatric diagnoses. 15 percent of residents were taking four or more such medications.  Only 12 percent were getting nondrug treatments like behavioral therapy.

The article mentions Victor Molinari, a professor of aging at the University of South Florida and lead author of the study.  He wasn’t startled by those statistics. “They confirmed what I suspected,” he told me in an interview. “And people who work in nursing homes wouldn’t be surprised.  It seems the use of psychoactive medication is trumping the use of nondrug treatments,” Dr. Molinari said.   And given the possible interactions with the many other drugs most residents take, an average 10 or more prescriptions, “it could well be that we’re causing problems like falls, confusion and delirium, and hospitalizations,” he cautioned.

Nursing homes’ reliance on psychoactive drugs has troubled professionals in geriatrics for years.   In many states, residents being admitted directly from hospitals are exempt from screening.  As a result, federal data show, fewer than half of residents with major mental illnesses receive the mandated assessment.  Only half of nursing homes provide weekly patient consultations with psychiatrists, psychologists or other mental health experts; even fewer provide consultations with those who specialize in working with seniors. In addition, staffs are stretched thin and inadequately trained in mental health care. With a pill a quicker and simpler intervention than the alternatives, intentional overuse is the result.   If the aide had fewer patients to care for or if management increased staffing numbers, and more time to soothe one who was agitated, if she’d had better training in responding to behavioral problems, she might be able to handle behavioral issues.  

The Justice Department brought criminal charges against Eli Lilly, accusing the big pharmaceutical firm of illegally marketing its anti-psychotic Zyprexa to doctors who work in nursing homes and assisted living facilities, and encouraging them to prescribe it for sleep disorders and dementia. Its approved use is to treat schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. Lilly agreed to pay $1.4 billion in a related civil settlement.

“For years, I’ve had calls from family members saying, ‘Mom was completely lucid when she went into the nursing home, and a week later she no longer recognized us,’” said Janet Wells, public policy director of NCCNHR, formerly the National Citizens’ Coalition for Nursing Home Reform. “Families should question why drugs are prescribed, do some research. A lot of drugs are being used as restraints.”

Paula Span is the author of the recently published “When the Time Comes: Families With Aging Parents Share Their Struggles and Solutions.”

 

Arrests in chemical restraint death cases

ABC News reported a story about the deaths of residents caused by over medication and chemical restraint.  When residents at the Kern Valley Nursing Home complained or annoyed nursing director Gwen Hughes, prosecutors say she chemically restrained them with powerful anti-psychotic drugs. Her methods were so severe, three residents died.

California Attorney General Jerry Brown says that Hughes ordered one patient drugged just for glaring at her, and another for throwing a carton of milk. Some residents were left drooling, dehydrated, and dangerously thin.  According to Brown, "In a couple cases, elderly people were actually held down, restrained against their will, and given excessive amounts of medicine to keep them quiet."

Even more shocking -- Hughes had been fired for over-drugging once before, from a nursing home in nearby Fresno, Calif. The administrator of that nursing home said they told her next employer only the dates she worked there.

Three nursing home officials appeared at a hearing on charges of elder abuse at the Kern Valley facility from 2003 to 2007 -- Gwen Hughes, as well as administrator Pamela Ott and staff physician, Dr. Hoshang Pormir. The three defendants each face up to 11 years in prison, and all have pleaded not guilty. A preliminary hearing is set for March 9, 2010.

Additionally, a former pharmacist at the facility, Debbi Gayle Hayes, accepted a plea bargain on the condition that she testifies for the prosecution.

Experts say over-drugging is common nationwide, and the number of nursing home residents who are given these drugs is rising.   It has been estimated that nursing homes give anti-psychotics to one in every four patients. Some suggest that the drugs are replacing physical restraints, which are now illegal except as a last resort.

Toby Edelman, from the watchdog Center for Medicare Advocacy, says, "They're hiding the restraints. A physical restraint is visible, but a chemical restraint is not."

Using a chemical purely as a restraint is also illegal, but they are so widely used that the lawyer for Pormir, the doctor in the California case, plans to cite the drugs' widespread use as part of his defense.

His attorney, Dennis Thelen, says, "To suggest that using psychotropic medication is contrary to a patient's best interest is just flatly contradicted by what happens every day in the United States, yesterday, right now, and tomorrow."

A Food and Drug Administration official estimates that unnecessary anti-psychotics kill 15,000 nursing home patients each year, including Fannie Mae Brinkley.

There are steps you can take to make sure your loved one isn't at risk. Click the links below for more information.

Elder Justice Coalition http://www.elderjusticecoalition.gov

National Committee for the Prevention of Elder Abuse http://www.preventelderabuse.org

National Adult Protective Services Association http://www.apsnetwork.org/

National Center on Elder Abuse http://www.ncea.aoa.gov

National Association of State Units on Aging www.nasua.org

National Academy of Elder Law Attorneys www.naela.org

National Association of State Long-Term Care Ombudsman Programs http://www.nasop.org/

Nursing Home Comparison Tool from Medicare http://www.medicare.gov/NHCompare

Center for Medicare Advocacy www.medicareadvocacy.org

Directory of State Resources from the National Center on Elder Abuse http://www.ncea.aoa.gov/NCEAroot/Main_Site/Find_Help/State_Resources.aspx

 

Chemical Restraints and overmedication

Chicago Tribune had an article that is a good follow-up or counter balance to yesterday's blog entry.  The article discusses the overmedication of nursing home residents including Delores Fleming.  She moved into Heritage Manor of Mount Zion and scored 23 out of 30 on a mental exam and was deemed to be "moderately impaired," state inspection records show.  Fleming had few problems her first week in the nursing home, according to her medical records, which her family provided to the Tribune.  But after she repeatedly had crying spells and tried to wander away, the nursing home doctor prescribed two anti psychotic drugs, even though she was not psychotic. Her family had given consent for the Seroquel, but the medical records show the permission sheet erroneously described the drug as an anti-anxiety medication. Seroquel is an anti psychotic drug intended for serious mental illnesses, such as schizophrenia.

Records show that Fleming briefly improved on the Seroquel, but over the next three months she had episodes of extreme anxiety.  The doctor doubled the dosage of one medication no fewer than four times, putting her above the recommended limit.  Once she thought she was possessed, nursing notes state. Another time she thought her brother had left her $50 million.

Her doctor ordered multiple injections of the anti psychotic drug Haldol and the anti-anxiety medication Ativan, state inspection records show. Fleming's dose of Seroquel also was repeatedly doubled, putting her above the recommended limit for that drug.

After Fleming's family complained that she had grown lethargic, the staff referred her to a neurologist. According to a state inspection report, the neurologist found her catatonic and believed she had developed tremorlike "Parkinson's symptoms, due to the Haldol."  When he gave her the same mental exam she had previously taken, she scored zero out of 30. The neurologist recommended that her drugs be curtailed, and her condition dramatically improved. When she retook the test, she scored a 30 out of 30.

Both her family and the facility decided she should live elsewhere. The family wanted her in a home that specialized in Alzheimer's care; Heritage Manor believed Fleming was endangering other residents, records show, and gave her 30 days to leave.

When the Tribune reviewed 40,000 state and federal inspection reports filed since 2001 on 742 Illinois nursing homes, numerous instances emerged in which regulators cited facilities for misusing psychotropics even though the patients' doctors had created the problems.

When physicians or psychiatrists prescribe a drug for a patient, facilities must administer it as long as the order is consistent with state and federal nursing home regulations. If inspectors determine a violation occurred, they cite the nursing facility, not the doctor.

The Tribune found that inspectors documented many cases in which doctors prescribed powerful anti psychotic drugs without adequate justification or in doses that were too high.  The doctors also sometimes failed to provide adequate follow-up care, the inspection records show. They are required to see their nursing home patients only once every 60 days, though some do not visit even that often.  Several nursing home owners interviewed by the Tribune said they have struggled with doctors who rarely make time to visit patients.

Nursing homes are required to have pharmacists visit the facilities regularly and review prescriptions. If they discover irregularities, such as a patient placed on a drug without cause, they notify the nursing staff and doctor. But the Tribune found that when pharmacists recommended that a psychotropic be discontinued or the dosage reduced, physicians sometimes ignored the advice.

The difficult task of monitoring for side effects is left to nurses who are poorly trained in the use of psychotropic drugs. Experts say the situation can affect quality of care, and the Tribune's review of inspection reports shows that is true -- sometimes with tragic consequences.

The Chicago Tribune has done a great job researching, investigating, and writing about the use and abuse of anti-psychotics in nursing homes. See full article here.
 

Criminal prosecution for overmedication

BakersfieldNow.com had another article about the criminal prosecutions of nursing home employees who drugged against their will.  The article mentions that Kern Valley Hospital administrator Pamela Ott was charged Tuesday on eight felony counts of elder abuse for allowing staff to forcibly administer psychotropic medications to patients for their own convenience, rather than for their patients' therapeutic needs.  The druggings led to the deaths of three nursing home residents.  Medical complications, including lethargy and the inability to eat or drink properly, resulted from the forced medications.  Twenty-two patients were given high doses, and one surviving patient was greatly harmed, the investigation determined.  Three other people were charged in February for their alleged roles in the case. All of the defendants worked for Kern Valley Healthcare District's skilled nursing facility including the former director of nursing Gwen Hughes, former pharmacist Debbi Hayes and staff physician Dr. Hoshang Pormir.

Management at the nursing home ordered staff to give high doses of psychotropic medications to Alzheimer's and other dementia patients to make them more tranquil and easier to control.  The medications were given to patients who argued, made noise or were otherwise disruptive.

"As hospital administrator, Pamela Ott was ultimately responsible for safeguarding the welfare of her patients," Attorney General Jerry Brown said in a news release. "Instead, Ott abdicated her responsibility and allowed the staff of the Kern Valley Hospital to forcibly sedate patients who questioned their care."

Prosecutors said last month that former pharmacist Hayes was placed on probation and agreed to cooperate with the attorney general's office in its prosecution of the other defendants.

Chemical restraint leads to tragic deaths

There have been many articles about the recent deaths at a California nursing home from overmedication or intentional overdose.  Here, here, here, here, and here are some articles where I got some information.  It is an incredible story that is symbolic of the hiring practices and training of staff in the nursing home industry, and the use of medications as a chemical restraint.  The use of chemical restraint in elder-care facilities is not a new problem. However, it’s unethical, and if given without consent of the individual or a healthcare proxy, illegal.

Kern Valley Hospital houses a skilled nursing facility where several employees are accused of killing three patients by force-feeding them psychotropic drugs to keep them calm.
In one allegation, nursing home resident Opal Towery was injected with anti-psychotic drugs after an argument with the nursing director and spent the next week in a zombielike state.  In another, Louise Zimmerman was pinned down by four staffers and injected with the same drugs. She never regained full consciousness.

Those were among the disturbing stories in a criminal complaint filed by the California Attorney General’s office that led to the arrests Wednesday of three current and former employees of the Kern Valley Healthcare District’s skilled nursing facility. The complaint alleges a nursing director, pharmacist and physician drugged at least 22 elderly residents with mood-altering medications to quiet and control them, leading to the deaths of three. The alleged druggings occurred between August 2006 and January 2007.

“When I was handed the newspaper by a co-worker, I felt like somebody had slammed me in the stomach,” said Betty Dennison. Her mother-in-law, Beulah Dennison, died Jan. 21, 2007, less than three months after she was placed at the Kern Valley Healthcare District’s skilled nursing facility. Several days before Beulah’s death, a nurse told Dennison her mother-in-law had been drugged to keep her quiet and complacent.

Patti McGarvey’s 74-year-old mother, Norma Lee Cudahy, entered the facility in March 2006 to recover from knee surgery and died in November from a stroke. McGarvey doesn’t know what drugs her mother received but after hearing the alleged druggings targeted patients who complained or acted out, she got worried.

“These are powerful medications that were given, in some cases against people’s will, primarily for management, not health reasons,” Attorney General Edmund G. Brown Jr. said. “It's unconscionable behavior and it’s certainly not what people expect when they entrust their parents or grandparents to a skilled nursing home.”

Gwen Hughes was the director of nursing.  Debbi Gayle Hayes was the facility’s pharmacist.  Dr. Hoshang M. Pormir was medical director of the skilled nursing facility.

 

The 27-page complaint describes interviews with facility nurses and medical experts who say Hughes ordered certain patients to receive high and unnecessary doses of anti-psychotic drugs.

Pharmacist Hayes followed her orders, telling investigators she thought Hughes was knowledgeable in the treatment of psychiatric conditions. Pormir, the physician, signed off on the orders after the drugs were administered.

Hughes’ orders often came after residents "acted out" or complained, and were often administered without patient consent.   At least two residents were forcibly injected; a third had psychotropic drugs sprinkled on her food.  The investigation found none of the residents received a medical exam or diagnosis prior to receiving the powerful doses.

The attorney general’s investigation identified three residents believed to have died as a result of being drugged and neglected:

• Fannie May Brinkley died Dec. 23, 2006, after receiving Depakote, a drug to treat mood disorders. After not eating for six days, she was rushed to the emergency room, where she died.

• Eddie Dolenc was given unnecessary anti-psychotic medication that caused him to become extremely sedated, and unable to eat or drink. He died one month after being admitted to the facility, likely from dehydration or pneumonia.

• Joseph Shepter went to the emergency room on Jan. 14, 2007, for dehydration and died five hours later. He had been given three anti-psychotic drugs.

In addition to the three deaths, the drugged residents suffered serious side effects ranging from severe lethargy that inhibited eating and drinking for long periods to weight loss, drooling and incoherence.

People interviewed by investigators pinned most of the blame on nursing director Hughes, who was fired in 1999 from a Fresno nursing home after the state cited the facility for over-medicating patients.   Nurses at the Kern Valley facility said the drugging of patients began when Hughes was hired.  She held “interdisciplinary team meetings” in which she and the staff discussed residents' behavior and Hughes told the pharmacist what drugs to prescribe.

Tish Orr, a registered nurse at the Kern Valley facility for 25 years, said the druggings were orchestrated by nursing director Hughes.

Orr recalled Hughes ordering a potent anti-psychotic drug be given to an Alzheimer’s patient.

“I would have him up at the nurses’ station while I was working, and he’d been drinking coffee and eating graham crackers and was happy as could be,” she said. “But he’d say the same thing 140 times in a row and it drove her nuts, and that’s why she had him medicated.”

“From that day on, he didn't eat or drink. He was so weak he couldn't be in his wheelchair anymore.”

The man eventually died.

When the nurses objected or raised concerns, Hughes threatened to fire them and have their nursing license revoked.  Several nurses left the facility during Hughes’ tenure. One nurse told investigators she was so distraught by the situation that she was on the verge of “a nervous breakdown.”

Gwen Hughes was fired from two nursing facilities for over-drugging patients yet landed a job at Mercy Hospital in Bakersfield and to this day has a clean nursing record. How did Hughes — facing criminal charges in the deaths of three local nursing home patients — keep getting hired?

Interviews with health care regulators and a former employer showed that nursing homes blame privacy laws despite the firings, the result of twice being implicated in state investigations for over-drugging elderly patients.

It’s public now. Threats kept the truth about what happened at Kern Valley from coming out sooner, said Tish Orr, a registered nurse there for 25 years. When nurses objected to patients receiving heavy doses, Orr said, Hughes threatened to fire them or have their licenses revoked.

“We were so cowed and threatened with losing our jobs and our licenses that after a while we just shut our mouths and did what we had to do,” Orr said.

Nurses who worked under Hughes at the Sunnyside Convalescent Home in Fresno in the late 1990s described a similar situation, Fellen said.

“She would go up to (a nurse) and basically force them to write an order (for medications),” he said. “She threatened to fire them. She could be very intimidating.”

Hughes was fired as nursing director there in 1999 after a state investigation revealed her role in overmedicating patients. She was hired in Kern Valley in 2006. After being terminated from that job, she briefly worked at Mercy Hospitals.

Incredibly, there are no blemishes on Hughes’ nursing record. The Board of Registered Nursing said it will now act to suspend Hughes’ license. A little to late for the dozens of victims of her "care".

Three of the four drugs allegedly over-prescribed to patients at a Lake Isabella nursing home can pose such deadly side effects to the elderly that they bear the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s “black box” warning label. Zyprexa, Resperidol and Seroquel were developed to treat severe psychotic disorders, such as schizophrenia, but are increasingly given to nursing home residents, often to treat behavioral issues, said Dr. Kathryn Locatell, a geriatric physician who specializes in forensic investigation of elder abuse.  Common side effects in the elderly are constipation, risk of falling and difficulty swallowing, which can lead to dehydration, weight loss and other life-threatening problems. In most cases, the risks or prescribing the drugs to elderly patients far outweigh the benefits, Locatell said.

Because the drugs can cause sudden death in elderly patients, said Locatell, they bear the FDA’s strongest designation for medications that may have life-threatening side effects.

The use of anti-psychotic drugs in the elderly can pose serious risks. Geriatric physician Kathryn Locatell and longterm care ombudsman Nona Tolentino said people with a loved one in a nursing home, skilled nursing facility or other residential care setting should asked for detailed information about medications.

Here are some questions to ask:

• What medication is my loved one on?

• What are you trying to treat with this drug? What are the specific behaviors that need treatment?

• How will this drug improve my loved one’s condition?

• How often and how long will it be administered?

• What are the side effects?

• Has a doctor examined my loved one to determine if this is appropriate?

• How will side effects be monitored?

• Why are drugs even being considered?

• What other approaches could be used? What has been tried?

“If you can't get good answers, then ask for a meeting with the director of nursing or the pharmacist,” Tolentino said. Or, seek an outside pharmacist’s opinion. Facilities should also have a “care plan” for each resident or patient. Ask for a meeting to review it with facility staff.

Locatell said national statistics show about 50 percent of nursing home residents are on some form of psychotropic medication. Most are on anti-depressants, which she considers OK since there’s high incidence of depression among nursing home residents. But about 30 percent of residents are now on anti-psychotics, a class of psychotropics designed to treat serious mental illness. The use of those drugs in a nursing home should “raise a flag” for loved ones, she said.

“As far as I’m concerned, it’s replaced the use of physical restraints,” said Nona Tolentino, former director of the county’s adult protective services program who now oversees the long-term care ombudsman program at Greater Bakersfield Legal Assistance. “That’s what I see and that’s what we hear. There are behavioral problems in a nursing home and staff readily presents that to a doctor and the doctors agree to prescribe the drug or increase the dosage.”


 

 

$360,000 fine for chemical restraint

Associated Press reported that a nursing home was fined $360,000 related to the suspicious deaths of 6 patients at a northern Illinois nursing home.  Investigators have evidence that leads them to believe that the nurses employed by the nursing home was giving unnecessary drugs to the residents so they would not have to care for them.  This kind of behavior is considered a chemical restraint.  Because of patient load and lack of adequate staffing, the nurses give sedatives and other medications to quiet the residents so less care is required.  If the residents are asleep, the staff doesn't have to respond to call bells, change briefs, or feed the residents. 

Penny Whitlock was indicted last spring on criminal charges including neglect and obstruction of justice.   Authorities began investigating the facility in Woodstock after six patients suspiciously died in 2006. Another employee, nurse Marty Himebaugh, also has been charged in the case.

 

Jury compensates family for death of mother.

The Star-Telegram reported a verdict in a tragic nursing home case.  The article asserts that Mable Ann Webb didn’t have to die.   Webb entered CLC Richland Hills nursing home for physical therapy. Within two weeks her skin became flushed and clammy. Her eyes turned red, her tongue swelled and she could not speak.

A month after entering the home, in July 2004, Webb died at a Fort Worth hospital of kidney failure caused by an untreated urinary tract infection and being overmedicated with pain killers.  A  jury awarded Webb’s family $2.1 million from the home and its medical director. The family’s attorney, Geno Borchardt, doubts they’ll collect anything from the nursing home, which did not have insurance. Legal damage caps could also reduce the award, he said.

Gary R. Trebert, who owned the nursing home at the time of Webb’s death, is to be sentenced at 9:30 a.m. Monday for conspiring to evade about $34 million in taxes related to nursing home companies he controlled, including some in Tarrant County.

The jury award included $1.2 million in punitive damages against Dr. Adolphus Ray Lewis of Fort Worth, the medical director at CLC Richland Hills. He was also found 49 percent liable for the $900,000 in actual damages.

Punitive damages against the nursing home are still to be determined, Borchardt said.

The lawsuit alleged that Lewis was responsible for prescribing a painkiller at three times the appropriate dosage.   In August 1998, the Texas Medical Board found that Lewis violated state law by prescribing large quantities of controlled substances, among other deficiencies. Lewis’ medical license was restricted from prescribing certain drugs in an office setting for three years, and he was ordered to complete 50 hours of continuing medical education, state records show. But Lewis was allowed to prescribe medications at nursing homes.

CLC Richland Hills was acquired by a new owner, but Lewis continues as the medical director there.

Among the list of suspected culprits in Webb’s death was the nursing home fax machine. It was broken so nursing home staff did not see an analysis of Webb’s urinary tract infection for about two weeks, Borchardt said.

Trebert, 57, faces up to 10 years in prison and possible fines and restitution.  The tax evasion scheme involved about 70 nursing homes that Trebert and two other North Texas men operated across the country, according to court documents.

 

 

Overmedicating Demented Residents

NY Times had an article about the overuse of certain medications in elderly residents.  Below are excerpts of the article.

Ramona Lamascola thought she was losing her 88-year-old mother to dementia. Instead, she was losing her to overmedication.  Last fall her mother, Theresa Lamascola, of the Bronx, suffering from anxiety and confusion, was put on the antipsychotic drug Risperdal. When she had trouble walking, her daughter took her to another doctor — the younger Ms. Lamascola’s own physician — who found that she had unrecognized hypothyroidism, a disorder that can contribute to dementia.

Theresa Lamascola was moved to a nursing home to get these problems under control. But things only got worse. “My mother was screaming and out of it, drooling on herself and twitching,” said Ms. Lamascola, a pediatric nurse. The psychiatrist in the nursing home stopped the Risperdal, which can cause twitching and vocal tics, and prescribed a sedative and two other antipsychotics.

“I knew the drugs were doing this to her,” her daughter said. “I told him to stop the medications and stay away from Mom.”

Not until yet another doctor took Mrs. Lamascola off the drugs did she begin to improve.

The use of antipsychotic drugs to tamp down the agitation, combative behavior and outbursts of dementia patients has soared, especially in the elderly. Sales of newer antipsychotics like Risperdal, Seroquel and Zyprexa totaled $13.1 billion in 2007, up from $4 billion in 2000, according to IMS Health, a health care information company.

Part of this increase can be traced to prescriptions in nursing homes. Researchers estimate that about a third of all nursing home patients have been given antipsychotic drugs.  [Blogger's note: Typically these medications are used as "chemical restraints" to quiet the residents down--a sure sign of understaffing.]

The increases continue despite a drumbeat of bad publicity. A 2006 study of Alzheimer’s patients found that for most patients, antipsychotics provided no significant improvement over placebos in treating aggression and delusions.

In 2005, the Food and Drug Administration ordered that the newer drugs carry a “black box” label warning of an increased risk of death. Last week, the F.D.A. required a similar warning on the labels of older antipsychotics.   The agency has not approved marketing of these drugs for older people with dementia, but they are commonly prescribed to these patients “off label.” Several states are suing the top sellers of antipsychotics on charges of false and misleading marketing.

Ambre Morley, a spokeswoman for Janssen, the division of Johnson & Johnson that manufactures Risperdal, would not comment on the suits, but said: “As with any medication, the prescribing of a medication is up to a physician. We only promote our products for F.D.A.-approved indications.”

Nevertheless, many doctors say misuse of the drugs is widespread. “These antipsychotics can be overused and abused,” said Dr. Johnny Matson, a professor of psychology at Louisiana State University. “And there’s a lot of abuse going on in a lot of these places.”

Dr. William D. Smucker, a member of the American Medical Directors Association, a group of health professionals who work in nursing homes, agreed. Though the group encourages doctors to conduct a thorough assessment and prescribe antipsychotics only as a last resort, he said, “Many physicians are absent without leave in the nursing home and don’t take an active role in the assessment of the patient.”

Nursing homes are short staffed, and insurers do not generally pay for the attentive medical care and hands-on psychosocial therapy that advocates recommend. It is much easier to use sedatives and antipsychotics, despite their side effects. 

Common causes of the symptoms include ministrokes, reparable brain hemorrhage from a mild bump on the head, hypothyroidism, dehydration, malnourishment, depression and sleep disorders.

The Medicare Web site has basic information on individual homes at www.medicare.gov/NHcompare. The National Citizens’ Coalition for Nursing Home Reform, at www.nccnhr.org, offers a consumer guide to choosing a nursing home.

Theresa Lamascola still has dementia, but she went from confinement in a wheelchair — unable to sit still and screaming out in fear — to being able to walk with help, sit peacefully, have some memory and ability to communicate, understand subtleties of conversations and even make jokes.

Or, as her daughter put it, “I got my mother back.”

This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: June 25, 2008
An article on Tuesday about the use of antipsychotic drugs in dementia patients misspelled the names of two drugs in a different class, sometimes used to treat the symptoms of Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s diseases. They are Exelon and Namenda, not Exalon and Menamda.


Use of chemical restraints in nursing homes

 Warren Wolfe of the Star Tribune in St. Paul, Mn. wrote a great article on the overuse of medications in the nursing home population.

Thousands of nursing homes nationwide are using powerful antipsychotic drugs to quiet disruptive people with mild dementia -- at times a step that's easier and cheaper than training staff to fix the problem.   The practice is alarming Medicaid officials so they ordered state nursing home inspectors to crack down on it. 

The Food and Drug Administration requires some to carry a "black box warning" that they heighten risk of death for older patients, a warning that it might extend to all antipsychotic drugs. They also increase the risk of confusion and falling.   The drugs often are prescribed whether the resident is psychotic or not.

Antipsychotic drugs have become the No. 1 drug paid for by Medicaid, which regulates and pays for nursing home care.  It's easy to understand why an overworked and burnt out nurse might want a resident drugged as a chemical restraint.  However, unless the resident is combative because of a mental illness such as paranoia, there's always a better way to control disruptive behavior in someone with dementia than with drugs, said John Brose, a Minneapolis psychologist who consults at more than 100 nursing homes, including Hopkins.

"Usually, that person is trying to communicate something -- I'm too cold, too hot, constipated, frightened, tired, thirsty," he said. "Figure that out, then deal with the real problem."


Poliakoff & Associates, P.A., is one of South Carolina’s most respected and distinguished law firms. The Poliakoff firm began nearlyMore...