Assisted Living Facility Resident Dies After Swallowing Detergent

A 93-year-old Alzheimer's patient at an assisted living facility in Delray Beach, Florida has died after accidentally swallowing diswasher detergent.  The state agency is investigating and the facility may face a $10,000 fine for not properly securing its kitchen, which allowed this tragic event to occur.

The resident, who was described as being in the late stages of Alzheimer's disease, went into the dementia unit's satellite kitchen in the early morning while the two staff members on duty were caring for another resident.  He then apparently drank the dishwasher detergent and was discovered by the staff members.  Though they called 911, paramedics and doctors were not able to save him and he died 18 hours later.

Though the facility claims it did nothing wrong and could not have predicted something like this would occur, records show that the facility had previously been cited for not properly securing areas of its dementia unit, including the kitchen, beauty salon, and laundry room.  According to the report, residents had access to potentially dangerous items such as a hot coffee pot, hot curling irons, and various chemical products.

This story illustrates the inadequacy of state inspections.  Even though the facility had already been cited for not securing the kitchen, the administration was apparently not motivated to correct the problem, leading to the resident's death.  Nursing home and assisted living facility administrators should be held more accountable for their actions so that these problems can be addressed before someone dies needlessly, not after. 

For more information, visit the Nursing Home Advocates' page on Accidental Death in Assisted Living Facilities.

California Nursing Home to Pay $28 Million in Death

A nursing home near Sacramento, California has been ordered to pay $28 million in punitive damages for the death of a resident.  The nursing home was found to be deliberately understaffed and to provide substandard care.  The large punitive damages amount is a record for Sacramento county and was meant to send a message to the home that they can no longer save money by cutting corners.

According to the Sacramento Bee, 79-year-old Frances Tanner died in early 2006, seven months after moving into Colonial Healthcare, a nursing operated by Horizon West Healthcare, which operates 33 nursing homes, mostly in Northern California.

According to Tanner's daughter, Tanner was bedridden after a fall caused by a hip fracture that had gone undiagnosed.  While confined to her bed, she died of a bed sore.  The Tanner case was the fourth in recent years in which Colonial had been cited in the death of a resident.

Tanner's family was earlier awarded $1.1 million for their pain and suffering.  The $28 million punitive damage verdict is intended primariy to punish Horizon West for their negligence and remove the financial incentive to provide substandard care. 

As in many cases, Tanner's death was caused by a variety of factors resulting from abuse.  Solomon and Relihan's Nursing Home Advocates website offers informational pages on all of these symptoms of abuse:

You should also visit Nursing Home Advocates to learn how to detect abuse and neglect and stop it before it's too late.

 

 

 

Tucson Nursing Home Settles Wrongful Death Lawsuit

Tucson nursing home Devon Gables has reached a settlement in wrongful death lawsuit bought by the family of a hospice patient who died from sepsis after developing severe pressure sores.  It is one of three lawsuits for neglect and abuse that the Tucson nursing home currently has pending against it.

The Arizona Daily Star reports that the settlement was reached with Kathleen Havens, whose mother, Irma Smith, died at Devon Gables in 2006.  The settlement was reached shortly before Havens was set to testify.  Though Smith was a hospice patient, Havens and her attorney argued that Smith's death was hastened by the staff members at Devon Gables because she developed sepsis from a pressure sore.

Pressure sores, also called bed sores or pressure ulcers, are one of the most pervasive and serious symptoms of nursing home neglect.  Pressure sores develop from a lack of blood to a certain area of the body, caused by persistent pressure on that area.  The elderly and physically disabled are prone to bed sores because they cannot move and reposition themselves when lying in bed. 

Nursing home staff are required to move residents at certain intervals throughout the day.  If the resident's care plan is being followed, there should be no reason for pressure sores to develop.  However, unfortunately, 23% of long-term care residents will develop pressure sores at some point and 8% of nursing home deaths are caused by bed sores.

For more information on bed sores, you can read this MedlinePlus report.  If you have a loved one in a nursing home and are afraid neglect is leading to bed sores, you should contact an experienced Arizona nursing home abuse attorney.

For additional information on bed sores and pressure ulcers, visit the Nursing Home Advocates Bed Sores information page.