Resident died when left alone in cold rain for several hours

St. Louis Post dispatch had a story about another resident who died of exposure when the facility failed to supervise her. The resident was left alone outside for hours and died of exposure.   Interviews of employees at the Northgate Park Nursing Home provide no explanation for how the resident ended up dying of exposure right outside the door to the facility. Fannie Mae Rooks was found dead in her wheelchair in the cold and rain.  Officers have talked with much of the staff, trying to learn how Rooks got to an outside smoking area sometime after the 9 p.m. rounds.  Investigators are trying to figure out how Rooks remained unnoticed there for several hours.

CommuniCare Heath Services owns the nursing home.  No employee has been disciplined or fired.

Rooks was found in a courtyard about 2 a.m. in the cold rain. Temperatures that night were between 36 and 40 degrees. Rooks was outside for several hours because she was last seen by nursing staff at 9 p.m. rounds.  The family believes that the staff tried to cover up the circumstances by bringing her body inside and trying to "clean her up and dry her off" before calling authorities.

 

Nursing home covered up death of resident

WNBC.com had a story about how a nursing home lied to a resident's family regarding her death at the facility.  This typeof cover up oftens happens in nursing homes. The staff is typically the only ones who really know what happened to a resident.   The staff are worried about their job or are instructed by their corporate masters to mislead or cover up the neglect and abuse.

Olive Chase was 94 when she died at Sunrise at Fleetwood, an expensive assisted-living home in Mount Vernon, in February 2007.  The nursing home told Chase's son that she had died in her sleep. The nursing home created an elaborate story that his mother had breakfast, was left alone at one point, and the aide returned to find she had died peacefully in her sleep.  The staff said Chase was sleeping at 7:30 a.m., but was "unresponsive" four hours later. Days after Chase was cremated, however, her family got a tip from someone with second hand knowledge of her death that the woman did not die peacefully.

Bob Chase, son of the woman who died, spoke with some of the staff and to the source who was the first nurse on the scene after his mother's death.   The nurse saw Olive's head caught between the bars of her hospital bed with her feet hanging off the side. The nurse said it appeared as if she struggled and then died of strangulation.

"Her tongue was protruding. It was purple," the nurse said.

The nurse said one of the maintenance workers then lifted Olive's legs while she held onto one of her shoulders.

"We brought her up, laid her flat on her bed," said the nurse. "I brushed her hair. This nursing coordinator told us, 'Don't say anything.'"

The nurse said the last person to treat Olive for a bedsore raised the bed for the treatment but did not lower it after, despite instructions to do so. Olive was known to wander, the nurse said.

"We had a sign on the top of the bed, readily visible, stating to lower the bed at its lowest level when finishing care," the nurse said.

An anonymous call to the state Department of Health days after Olive's death reported that the woman appeared to have died of asphyxiation after her head was caught in the bars, which triggered an investigation. The department concluded the caller's complaint was valid. The department found that Olive's body had been rearranged after her death, but it was not reported that way in Sunrise's records.



Investigation finds neglect and cover up

Four women were in a Louisville courtroom Tuesday morning answering to charges from manslaughter to tampering with evidence and perjury. This after a resident died from falling from her wheelchair.  The hearing was nothing more than a formality. It lasted less than five minutes and four not guilty pleas were entered. But it is a case of life and death after an investigation lasting more than a year.

Detective Fogle started his investigation shortly after Lois Schaefer Bright fell from her wheelchair, fracturing her head at the Four Courts Senior Center in June 2006. She died two weeks later at a hospital.

The investigation found Four Courts employee Rachael Bowerman forgot to apply the wheelchair's brake. Bowerman faces the most serious charges of second degree manslaughter and abuse or neglect of an adult. The manslaughter charge carries a prison sentence up to 10 years.

As for the other women now charged, Gail McWhorter faces perjury, tampering with evidence and reckless abuse or neglect of an adult. Tonita Thompson and Shaconda Daniel face perjury and tampering with evidence charges.

The state alleges that, after the fall, the trio picked Ms. Bright up, put her back in her wheelchair, wheeled her into the center, and placed her in bed before paramedics arrived.

When pressed about what changes have been made at Four Courts, no one would elaborate. WAVE 3 also discovered Gail McWhorter and Tonita Thompson still work at the nursing home. A spokesperson for Four Courts would not say if the other two women were fired or if they quit. All of the women had to post a $1,000 bond Tuesday to remain free.

Anonymous caller uncovers cover up

This article shows how some employees will not cover up neglect and abuse in nursing homes unlie the majority who are more loyal to their corporate masters than the residents they are bound to protect.

June Dankert was 87 and in good health when she died May 10. For the previous two years, she lived at the Tendercare Nursing Home in Hastings.  Her family said she wrote dozens of letters to loved ones each week to help keep her mind sharp.

After the funeral, an anonymous phone call raised questions.

June's daughter, Kay Trantham, told 24 Hour News 8 a woman from Tendercare called to tell the family how Dankert really died.  "When you go into a coma with no apparent reason, you do wonder," Trantham said. "Apparently, she was given her roommate's hospice medication."

The caller told Trantham there was a delay in getting her mother to the hospital, followed by a cover-up.

Documents obtained by 24 Hour News 8 from the state Department of Community Health divulge more, and confirm dates and stories about "resident number 402" - Dankert's resident number in paperwork provided from the state to Trantham.

The investigation shows multiple citations because Resident 402 was given medication meant for someone else. Resident 402 soon lapsed into a coma and died. Family and emergency room doctors were not notified of the mistake.

Records also show conflicting nurse notes on May 9, from the early morning to the afternoon when Resident 402 was finally taken to the hospital.


Rape trial of 98 year old resident

This article is very disturbing.  I cannot believe that the nursing home did not recognize this obvious sociopath.

A Victorian nursing home employee accused of pinning down a 98-year-old dementia patient "like an animal" and raping her was just doing his job, according to his defense lawyer.   Henry Alexander, 35, of Mount Martha, is accused of sexually assaulting four women in their 80s and 90s at a nursing home on the Mornington Peninsula in November 2005.

"Mr. Alexander's care of these particular residents is based on the fact that what he did was reasonable ... and it was all to do with the proper hygienic care of residents who had become incontinent with feces and urine,'' Gipp said.

Alexander's former colleague, Anne Girvasi, who no longer works at the home, said on one occasion she saw him pin a 98-year-old woman to the bed with his legs and digitally penetrate her.

"She was pinned down like an animal,'' Girvasi said. "Henry Alexander is an animal and a rapist, okay? What he did was disgusting.''

She said she did not file an incident report about Alexander's conduct because six-month old reports would pile up in the nurses' station and no action was taken.   Friend and former colleague Janine Blythe said she tried to make an appointment with Susan Younger, the Director of Nursing, but Younger cancelled.

She said she then submitted an incident report to CEO Heila Brookes, which detailed Alexander's alleged "inappropriate and rough'' touching of an 87-year-old woman on Nov. 4, 2005.

"She just ripped it up - she said it wasn't done the way it should be.''

Blythe was fired from the nursing home for failing to immediately report the incident.

Here is the full article.

HIPAA law being misused by health care providers

The NY Times has an interesting article about how health care providers misuse HIPAA to conceal medical mistakes or neglect from family members.

An emergency room nurse told Gerard Nussbaum he could not stay with his father-in-law while the elderly man was being treated after a stroke. Another nurse threatened Mr. Nussbaum with arrest for scanning his relative’s medical chart to prove to her that she was about to administer a dangerous second round of sedatives.

The nurses who threatened him with eviction and arrest both made the same claim, that access to his father-in-law and his medical information were prohibited under the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, or Hipaa, as the federal law is known.

Mr. Nussbaum, a health care and Hipaa consultant, knew better and stood his ground. Nothing in the law prevented his involvement. But the confrontation drove home the way Hipaa is misunderstood by medical professionals, as well as the frustration — and even peril — that comes in its wake.

Government studies released in the last few months show the frustration is widespread, an unintended consequence of the 1996 law.

Hipaa was designed to allow Americans to take their health insurance coverage with them when they changed jobs, with provisions to keep medical information confidential. But new studies have found that some health care providers apply Hipaa regulations overzealously, leaving family members, caretakers, public health and law enforcement authorities stymied in their efforts to get information.

Experts say many providers do not understand the law, have not trained their staff members to apply it judiciously, or are fearful of the threat of fines and jail terms — although no penalty has been levied in four years.

Some reports blame the language of the law itself, which says health care providers may share information with others unless the patient objects, but does not require them to do so. Thus, disclosures are voluntary and health care providers are left with broad discretion.

The unnecessary secrecy is a “significant problem,” said Mark Rothstein, chairman of a privacy subcommittee that advises the Department of Health and Human Services, which administers Hipaa. “It’s drummed into them that there are rules they have to follow without any perspective,” he said about health care providers. “So, surprise, surprise, they approach it in a defensive, somewhat arbitrary and unreasonable way.”

Susan McAndrew, deputy director of health information privacy at the Department of Health and Human Services, said that problems were less frequent than they once had been but that health care providers continued to hide behind the law. “Either innocently or purposefully, entities often use this as an excuse,” she said. “They say ‘Hipaa made me do it’ when, in fact, they chose for other reasons not to make the permitted disclosures.”

Mr. Rothstein, one of Hipaa’s harshest critics, has led years of hearings across the country. Transcripts of those hearings, and accounts from hospital administrators, patient advocates, lawyers, family members, and law enforcement officials offer an anthology of Hipaa misinterpretations, some alarming, some annoying:

¶Birthday parties in nursing homes in New York and Arizona have been canceled for fear that revealing a resident’s date of birth could be a violation.

¶Patients were assigned code names in doctor’s waiting rooms — say, “Zebra” for a child in Newton, Mass., or “Elvis” for an adult in Kansas City, Mo. — so they could be summoned without identification.

¶Nurses in an emergency room at St. Elizabeth Health Center in Youngstown, Ohio, refused to telephone parents of ailing students themselves, insisting a friend do it, for fear of passing out confidential information, the hospital’s patient advocate said.

¶State health departments throughout the country have been slowed in their efforts to create immunization registries for children, according to Dr. James J. Gibson, the director of disease control in South Carolina, because information from doctors no longer flows freely.

There are “good faith nondisclosures,” as when a floor nurse takes a phone call from someone claiming to be a family member but cannot verify that person’s identity. Then there are “bad faith nondisclosures,” like using Hipaa as an excuse for not taking the time to gather records that public health officials need to help child abuse investigators trying to build a case.

Most common are seat-of-the-pants decisions made by employees who feel safer saying “no” than “yes” in the face of ambiguity.

That seemed to be what happened to his own mother, Mr. Rothstein said, when she called her doctor’s office to discuss a problem. She was told by the receptionist that the doctor was not available, Mr. Rothstein said, and then inquired if the doctor was with a patient or out of the office. “I can’t tell you because of Hipaa,” came the reply. In fact the doctor was home sick, which would have been helpful information in deciding whether to wait for a call back or head for the emergency room.

Senator Edward M. Kennedy, Democrat of Massachusetts, a sponsor of the original insurance portability law, was dismayed by the “bizarre hodgepodge” of regulations layered onto it, several staff members said, and by the department’s failure to provide “adequate guidance on what is and is not barred by the law.” To that end, Mr. Kennedy, along with Senator Patrick M. Leahy, Democrat of Vermont, plans to introduce legislation creating an office within the Department of Health and Human Services dedicated to interpreting and enforcing medical privacy.

Ms. McAndrew explained some of the do’s and don’ts of sharing information in a telephone interview:

Medical professionals can talk freely to family and friends, unless the patient objects. No signed authorization is necessary and the person receiving the information need not have the legal standing of, say, a health care proxy or power of attorney. As for public health authorities or those investigating crimes like child abuse, Hipaa defers to state laws, which often, though not always, require such disclosure. Medical workers may not reveal confidential information about a patient or case to reporters, but they can discuss general health issues.

Ms. McAndrew said there was no way to know how often information was withheld. Of the 27,778 privacy complaints filed since 2003, the only cases investigated, she said, were complaints filed by patients who were denied access to their own information, the one unambiguous violation of the law.

Complaints not investigated include the plights of adult children looking after their parents from afar. Experts say family members frequently hear, “I can’t tell you that because of Hipaa,” when they call to check on the patient’s condition.

That is what happened to Nancy Banks, who drove from Bartlesville, Okla., to her mother’s bedside at Town and Country Hospital in Tampa, Fla., last week because Ms. Banks could not find out what she needed to know over the telephone.

Her 82-year-old mother had had a stroke. When Ms. Banks called her room she heard her mother “screaming and yelling and crying,” but conversation was impossible. So Ms. Banks tried the nursing station.  Whoever answered the phone was not helpful, so Ms. Banks hit the road. Twenty-two hours later, she arrived at the hospital.  But more of the same awaited her. She said her mother’s nurse told her that “because of the Hipaa laws I can get in trouble if I tell you anything.”

In the morning, she could speak to the doctor, she was told.

The next day, Ms. Banks was finally informed that her mother had had heart failure and that her kidneys were shutting down.

“I understand privacy laws, but this has gone too far,” Ms. Banks said. “I’m her daughter. This isn’t right.”

A hospital spokeswoman, Elena Mesa, was asked if nurses were following Hipaa protocol when they denied adult children information about their parents.

She could not answer the question, Ms. Mesa said, because Hipaa prevented her from such discussions with the press.



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