CNA pleads Guilty to Abuse

WREG out of Memphis reported a story from The Mountain Press about a Pigeon Forge nursing home aide pleading guilty to taking photos and video of nude patients. The Mountain Press reported 50-year-old Mary Ann Burgess entered guilty pleas to health care abuse charges.

Burgess and another nursing assistant at Pigeon Forge Care and Rehabilitation Center, April Longmire, were indicted in September on four counts each.  The newspaper reported the photos were discovered when Burgess apparently forgot her cell phone at a restaurant and employees found the pictures while trying to find out who the phone belonged to.

 

Employee jailed for taking sexually explicit photos of residents

The PressRepublican.com had a story about a nursing home employee who took and shared private inappropriate photos of residents in his care.  Shane Spooner has been ordered to jail and probation for taking sexually explicit photos of a traumatic-brain-injury patient in his care.  He was working at Clinton County Nursing Home when he took the inappropriate cell-phone picture of the 49-year-old and sent it via text message to a female co-worker.  Spooner had three prior misdemeanor convictions.  After investigating, authorities charged Spooner with second-degree unlawful surveillance and first-degree dissemination of an unlawful surveillance image.  Within two weeks of his August arrest, Spooner pleaded guilty to a reduced misdemeanor charge of attempted first-degree dissemination of an unlawful surveillance image.  He was sentenced to 45 days in County Jail for taking the picture. He was also ordered to complete three years probation and pay a $500 fine, along with a $200 surcharge.

Shane Spooner has said that he took a picture of the man's genitals for his own amusement, an act that Attorney General Andrew Cuomo has called "a disgusting example of abuse within the walls of a New York nursing home."

 

 


 

Nurses take nude photos of residents

Kristi Nelson at Knownews.com had an article about the nursing home employee who was caught taking nude pictures and videos of residents and sharing them with others.  This is a violation of the residents' privacy and dignitiy.   The unauthorized cell-phone photos and videos resulted in a state penalty for Pigeon Forge Care and Rehabilitation Center, a ban on staff members using cell phones in resident areas, and, according to state surveyors, multiple violations of at least a dozen residents' privacy and dignity.

The photos and videos were found when a cell phone was left at a local restaurant.   A restaurant worker turned on the phone in an attempt to identify its owner, recognized one of the photos of a resident and gave the phone to a family member employed at the nursing home.   That person gave the phone to the director of nursing, who turned it over to the facility's administrator after seeing the photos and videos.  Administrator Jon Bowers gave the phone to the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation and immediately fired the certified nursing assistant to whom the phone belonged. A second certified nursing assistant who appeared in some photos was later fired, and two others believed to be involved had earlier left the facility's employ.

The Tennessee Department of Health conducted an investigation at the nursing home.   In its report, the state determined Pigeon Forge Care and Rehabilitation Center failed to protect the residents from having unauthorized photos and videos taken - compromising their dignity, privacy and safety from abuse - and suspended admissions to the nursing home for a week.

Twelve residents appeared in 47 pictures and 27 videos, taken between July 2007 and March 2009, found on the phone. They included:

-- A photo of a male resident sitting on a shower chair, nude, with a string of beads around his neck.

-- A photo of a female resident sitting on a bed wearing only a brief and a hat, with one breast fully exposed.

-- Photos of a female resident wearing, at various times, a bib, a feathered mask, strawberry-shaped sunglasses and a wicker basket on her head.

-- A photo of a male resident lying nude on the floor.

-- Photos of a resident being fed, "wearing a bib and food running down (his) chin and neck."

-- Videos of residents being fed or attempting to feed themselves.

-- A video of a resident eating a cookie without dentures.

-- A video of a resident lying in bed with one hand down his pants.

-- A video of a resident in a wheelchair, using a broom in a motion similar to rowing a boat.

-- A video of a moaning resident in a bed being shaken by two certified nursing assistants, in an apparent attempt to get him to make a certain noise.

-- A video of the certified nursing assistant repeatedly telling a resident "I love you" and coaxing the resident to say it back.

The report states that the worker showed the photos to fellow employees.  Meanwhile, the resident council president told state investigators that residents had first complained about staff cell phone use in October 2007.

 

Employees take dignity away from residents.

The Fort Mill Times had an article about disgusting abuse of residents' rights including privacy and dignity.  Nursing home employees were taking pictures of residents on their cell phones attached songs with sexual lyrics and circulated them to other employees.  The nursing home in Lexington has been cited by state officials but no arrests have been made yet.   i do not understand how this could happen.  don't the employees have any shame at all.  

A citation issued against Bluegrass Care and Rehabilitation Center stated there was no indication the for-profit nursing home had trained staffers that using residents' pictures and/or recordings of a sexually exploitative nature were a form of abuse.  Do you really need to train them on something as simple as that.  Do they need training on simple respect and dignity.  This is outrageous.

 

Poliakoff & Associates, P.A., is one of South Carolina’s most respected and distinguished law firms. The Poliakoff firm began nearly 60 years ago by three attorney brothers: Matthew, J. Manning, and Bernard. With a history of believing the justice system...More...