Woman Sentenced to 15 Years in Illinois Nursing Home Theft

An Illinois judge has handed down a 15-year-prison sentence to a Quincy, Illinois woman who admitted to bilking a nursing home out of $14,500. The defendant pleaded guilty last month to stealing form the North Adams Home in Mendon. She was charged with forgery, theft and obstruction of justice. The woman now has 18 felony convictions. It is important for nursing homes to conduct background checks on all employees to avoid financial abuse. To read more about the financial exploitation, please click the link.

Dementia Patient Wanders Out of Nursing Home

A resident who suffered from dementia wandered out of a nursing home and was found more than two hours later, roaming in the snow and ice and subfreezing weather. The 68-year-old woman was rescued by members of the sheriff’s department. She uses a walker get around and was found behind the nursing home wearing just a golf shirt, pants and shoes. After being found wandering the victim was treated for exposure to the cold. The victim had to climb down three flights of stairs with his walker to escape the building. The victim is the second resident to wander away from the nursing home since it opened in October. The nursing home needs to address how a patient using a walker could have escaped so easily. Also all nursing homes need to ensure that wandering does not occur at their facilities. To read more about the wandering patient, please click the link.

Raids Target Felons in Chicago Nursing Homes

Federal, state and county officials swept two Chicago-area nursing homes for felons with outstanding arrest warrants and identified 18 residents wanted on charges ranging from disorderly conduct to burglary to assault. The early morning raids were initiated by Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan in response to Chicago tribune reports about Illinois nursing facilities that house high numbers of felons and sex offenders. Five people were arrested, including a sex offender wanted in another state. Three residents were too sick to be taken into custody. The team found nine felons when it swept Columbus Park Nursing & Rehabilitation Center on Chicago’s West Side. They found nine residents with warrants at Heather Health Center in Harvey. The team also did a sweep at Sumerset Place. The number of felons known to be living in Illinois nursing homes has grown as the state increasingly relies on the facilities to house younger psychiatric patients. A spokesman for the Columbus Park facility stated that the majority of the outstanding warrants were for out-of-state crimes and would not surface during a background check. Heather Health Center was recently given an “average” rating for the home despite the fact that there were 30 felons living in the nursing home. To read more about the Illinois nursing home raids, please click the link.

State Cites Nursing Home for Neglect

State Investigators say a woman recovering from spine surgery died of a massive stroke in June after a nursing home failed to give her a medication prescribed to prevent blood clots. The doctor’s order was incorrectly transcribed by a nurse at the nursing home. The nursing home committed nursing home negligence by failing to spot the error. The nurse who made the prescription error was fired and the staff has been retrained. The nursing home has been bought by Health Properties of Chicago. Inspectors found 23 rule violations. Nursing home violations are indicative of nursing home abuse. To read more about the prescription error, please click the link.

Health Care Reform Bill Contains Nursing Home Transparency and Elder Justice Act

The new Senate Health Care bill includes the nursing home transparency and improvement act and the elder justice act. This will ensure that criminal background checks are given to all long-term care workers. The House bill does not contain the Elder Justice Act. Since this bill is critical to decreasing elder abuse it is important that you contact your local Congressman and voice your support for the bill. To learn more about ways to help promote this nursing home legislation, please visit the NCCNHR’s website.

Teen Employee Denies Existence of Sexual Abuse at Nursing Home

A 19-year-old nursing home aide pled not guilty to charges that she was one of two employees who sexually abused elderly residents. According to the charges she inserted her finger into the rectum of an elderly resident at the nursing home. She said she was trying to trigger a bowel movement but acknowledged that this was not party of her training. She also acknowledged getting into bed with a resident and making a humping motion. The elderly abuse story takes an even worse turn when she admitted to patting the buttocks of one resident and trying to get another angry and then laughing at her. Many nursing home employees were arrested in this horrible case of nursing home abuse. To learn more about the nursing home abuse, please click the link.

Nursing Home Sweeps Find Outstanding Warrants

Officials swept two Chicago-area nursing homes for felons with outstanding arrest warrants and identified 18 residents wanted on charges ranging from disorderly conduct to burglary to assault. The raids involved 20 federal marshals and Cook County sheriff’s police were initiated by Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan. Five people were arrested, including a sex offender wanted in another state for failing to register. In three cases, the residents were too sick to be taken into custody, and the other warrants were not immediately enforceable because they were issued in other jurisdictions. Authorities examined records for Somerset Place on the North Side and discovered three residents with outstanding warrants. The number of felons known to be living in Illinois nursing homes has grown as the state increasingly relied on nursing homes to house younger psychiatric patients. Many of these patients have criminal records. To read the full sweep story, please click the link.

New Legislation Makes it Difficult to obtain Nursing Home Negligence Evidence

Attorneys for the family of woman who froze to death on the roof of a hospital are asking a judge to sanction the state Health Department for refusing to turn over notes written by inspectors who found hospital errors after her death. The notes the family seeks were taken days after her wrongful death and resulted in a critical 22-page inspection report made public in January. The dispute reports stems from a rule change in the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services enacted in late 2008. Attorneys say that the legislative changes deprive them of key evidence once available in wrongful death and negligence suits against hospitals and nursing homes. The rule has become a “substantial problem” across the country for attorneys pursuing claims against nursing homes and other heat facilities. This will make requests for records under the Freedom of Information Act drag out for years. To read more about the hindering legislation, please check out the link.

Elgin Man Admits Raping Elderly Woman

An Elgin, Illinois man was sentenced to 12 years in prison for sexually assaulting an elderly woman at the nursing home where they were both patients. The 22 year old man pled guilty to aggravated sexual assault in exchange for the sentence. The aggressor had snuck into the room of a 68-year-old woman at Maplewood Care in Elgin and raped her. He had entered the room while the victim was asleep and the nursing staff later found him hiding in her bathroom. Nursing home staff must be on alert when there is a mix of mentally ill and elderly patients to avoid sexual abuse. This type of elderly abuse has become all too common in Illinois nursing homes. To read more about the nursing home sentence, please click the link.

Fox River Pavilion Nursing Home Death is Suspicious

Aurora police ordered toxicology tests this weekend to investigate the suspicious death of a 57-year-old nursing home resident who died last week at Fox River Pavilion. According to the Chicago Tribune, authorities performed an autopsy on Saturday, but the results did not show any "signs or injuries that would explain his death." The nursing home resident died shortly after getting into a fight with his roommate at the home. To read the full story of this Fox River Pavilion death, click the link.

Nursing Home Sued Over Blood Thinner

The attorney for a former Illinois nursing home claims the patient suffered from massive rectal bleeding after nurses gave her a blood thinner. The nursing home administered 4 milligrams of Coumadin to the victim despite the fact that her physician had ordered her prescription be held because of an elevated PT/INR lab result. The drug is used to prevent blood clots, yet it ended up causing the victim to experience massive rectal bleeding and be hospitalized. In addition to her injuries, the victim suffered a marked deterioration of her prior physical condition, incurred substantial medical bills and suffered great pain and anguish. The nursing home lawsuit alleges that she suffered a severe and permanent disability. The nursing home lawsuit blames the nursing home and its employees for failing to properly consult with nursing home’s physician and her family members about her deteriorating condition, for failing to timely report the medication error, and for failing to comply with a physician’s orders. The employees negligently failed to record the care provided, which included the victim’s reaction to the prescription. The nursing home complaint also alleges that the nursing home violated the resident care policies. It seeks a judgment of more than $50,000 plus costs. To learn more about nursing home abuse, please click the link.

Illinois Nursing Home Inspections Stun State Officials

Top state officials who recently visited Illinois nursing homes said that they were stunned and disappointed by the conditions at some facilities. They described grim institutions crowded with large numbers of mentally ill residents who wandered aimlessly without proper treatment. Department of Human Services Assistant Secretary Grace Hou stated that it was an eye-opening experience. Other officials publicly questioned whether some of the mentally ill people had medical conditions that were serious enough to justify their placement in a nursing home. One Illinois nursing home had close to 80 percent of residents who were mentally ill, but facility administrators had labeled their mental illness as a secondary diagnosis. This becomes an issue because under current Medicaid rules, the federal government stops reimbursing the state for care at nursing homes when they fill more than half their beds with residents who are exclusively mentally ill. It has become evident that housing the elderly with mentally ill patients leads to nursing home abuse. The number of elderly rapes, assaults and deaths goes up greatly. To learn more about the recent inspection, check out the link.

$7.75 Million Awarded in Elderly Abuse Case

A jury awarded $7.75 million to the family of a 71-year-old stroke victim who filed an elder abuse lawsuit against his nursing home. The trial featured a secret videotape of the woman being abused. The nursing home abuse lasted 22 days. The jury deliberated for two days before announcing the $7.75 million dollar nursing home abuse verdict, $5 million of which were in actual damages. The 71 year old was a resident at the center and family members noticed during a visit that she was bruised. They complained to the facility, but the nursing home failed to investigate. The family then set up a video camera on a side table in her room to do their own investigation. The video tape caught an employee slapping the victim, puller her around by the hair, bending her neck, fingers and wrists and treating her violently in a shower chair. The employee pled no contest to simple battery. This is a heinous example of nursing home abuse. To learn more about the nursing home verdict, please click the link.

Illinois Nursing Home Accountability Lacking

One of the problems with the Illinois government is that taxpayers don’t see a good investment for their dollar. Last week it was revealed that Illinois nursing home administrators are rarely disciplined when nursing home negligence occurs. Between 2005 and 2009, the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation received 407 complaints from the state’s health department about nursing homes across the state. However, only three of those cases resulted in discipline for nursing home administrators. The numbers were put together by a task force that formed after it was revealed nursing homes had a series of assaults, rapes and murders in Illinois nursing homes. Currently, nursing home residents advocates are closely watching a case in an Elgin nursing home where a 21-year-old mentally ill resident sexually assaulted a 69-year-old woman. The state is alleging that a more thorough background check would have revealed that the young resident had an outstanding warrant on felony battery charges. By checking into the resident’s past the nursing home administrator would have avoided the elderly sexual abuse. Nursing home administrators should be liable for background checks on new residents. Illinois has an obvious broken nursing home administration system. To read more about the nursing home falter, please click the link.

New Charges in Columbus Park Nursing Center Resident Death

First degree murder charges have been brought upon a Chicago nursing home resident who killed a fellow resident in August at the Columbus Park Nursing Center in the city's West Side. According to a report on Chicago Breaking News, the 62-year-old resident, described as a psychotic felon with a history of aggressive behavior, began punching the victim after he found the victim eating his lunch. The 72-year-old victim, who suffered from dementia, was taken to a Chicago hospital where he died a month later from his injuries. Medical examiners later ruled his death a homicide.

This death was not the first incident of nursing home assault at Columbus Park Nursing Center. In fact, the report notes that earlier this year, there were 11 reported incidents of battery in a 90 day period. Incidents of nursing home abuse in Chicago have received a lot of attention lately, due to a recent series of reports by the Chicago Tribune that highlight some of the biggest issues surrounding poor quality care in nursing homes.

To learn more about this incident of abuse at Columbus Park Nursing Center, follow the link.

Illinois Weighing Tougher Sanctions for Nursing Home Administrators

State authorities stated that they are reviewing laws and policies to strengthen the disciplinary sanctions taken against nursing home administrators in cases of wrongdoing and patient harm. Although there are serious allegations of violence against nursing home residents, administrators are rarely punished by the Department of Financial & Professional Regulation, which licenses the administrators and other professional staff. The Chicago Tribune examination of government records show that department officials have been discussing possible reforms with the new Illinois Nursing Home Safety Task Force. Discussions have centered on ways the state Health Department can streamline the reporting of misconduct and safety breaches to their agency, which could strengthen the disciplining of facility administrators. Not one Illinois nursing home administrator has had his or her license revoked since January 2005. Additionally, out of the thousands of cases of nursing home abuse only 20 administrators have been disciplined for nursing home negligence. One nursing home administrator was found to have multiple health violations and was linked to the deaths of two residents for negligent care. Her license was only suspended for one year. Illinois nursing home administrators should be disciplined for gross negligent care. To read more about the new task force, check out the link.

Resident Falls and Breaks Hip, Despite Alarms Sounding

An elderly woman couldn’t walk safely by herself. She had advanced osteoporosis, dementia and a history of falling. To deal with these ailments, the staff at the nursing home put up many safeguards, including a bed alarm, a motion sensor, a sound monitor, a perimeter mattress and a bathroom light. The moved the victim to a room where they could watch her more closely. Still she was able to get up and walk around in the middle of the night, sounding the alarms. Nobody heard them and the victim was able to move a trash can into the hallway and took a bad fall. Two nurses aides and a licensed nurse were working in her unit, but one of the aides had gone over to another part of the building to cover staff breaks. Thus, there was no one at the nurse’s station to hear the alarms go off, causing the woman to fall and break her hip. The victim never recovered from her broken hip and died five days after the fall. State investigators found the nursing home neglectful and verified that the alarms could not be heard from the nurse’s station or other wings of the unit. To read more about nursing home negligence, please click the link.

Resident’s Family Files Nursing Home Negligence Lawsuit

The family of a former nursing home resident is suing a nursing home. According to court documents, the 74 year old resident died after living at Alden Meadow Park for approximately one year. The man had complained of severe abdominal pain and was taken to the hospital where he died from a severely impacted bowel. The man’s son is suing the nursing home for negligence by failing to care for the man and failing to hire qualified staff. The suit also claims that the man violated the regulations of the federal Nursing Home Reform Act of 1987. The Wisconsin Department of Health Services is listed as an involuntary plaintiff because the state oversees the payment of Medicare and Medicaid. The nursing home lawsuit seeks damages, payment of legal fees and hearings on the compensation due to Medicare or Medicaid. To read more about the nursing home lawsuit, please click the link.

Long-Term Care Stirs Health Care Debate

Embedded in the new health legislation being debated on the Senate floor is a major new federal insurance program for long-term care intended to help people who have cerebral palsy and multiple sclerosis. Advocates for elderly Americans and people with disabilities see the program as a long-overdue effort to address needs that will explode as baby boomers age. The nursing home legislation is meant for people with severe disabilities who want to live in the community, though the benefits could also be used to help pay for nursing home care or assisted living. Senator Tom Harkin stated that this is the next logical step after the Americans With Disabilities Act. It provides people with security and peace of mind. The Congressional Budget Office assumes that premiums would be $123 a month for benefits expected to average $65 a day. The amount of benefits would vary depending on the degree of the person’s disability. It would allow those with disabilities to live out their lives with decency and dignity. Please contact your US Senator and voice your support for this important nursing home legislation. To read more about how the nursing home legislation will help people with disabilities, please click the link.

Government Accountability Office Releases Special Focus List

If the GAO succeeds the number of nursing facilities on the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) Special Focus Facility (SFF) list from 135 to 580. The GAO enhanced the list by altering the methodology used by the CMS to make SFF designations. The changes include the use of a national rather than a state-based comparison and incorporating CMS Five Star Quality Rating scoring into the calculation. The GAO explained that its expanded list differs substantially from the CMS list. The list will contain the names and addresses of the facilities, which are identified as “the most poorly performing.” Hopefully this new list will help deter residents from choosing nursing homes guilty of elderly abuse. To take a look at the old nursing home list, please click the link.

Illinois Disciplines Few Nursing Home Administrators

In five years, an Illinois agency that disciplines nursing home administrators has received more than 400 complaints of elderly negligence from the state agency that investigates nursing home care. However, only three complaints have led to discipline. This is evidence of a broken system. Wendy Meltzer of Illinois Citizens for Better Care says the two agencies need to work more closely so nursing home administrators are held accountable. This nursing home abuse matter is under study by a task force that hopes to make recommendations to Governor Quinn. This is just another sign of the broken Illinois nursing home system. In order to learn more about disciplinary statistics, please click the link.

Nursing Home Residents Allowed to go to Home for the Day

The Center for Medicare Advocacy, Inc is releasing news the news that residents of skilled nursing facilities can leave their facility to attend a family holiday celebration without losing their Medicare coverage. The policy recognizes that although most beneficiaries are unable to leave their facility an outside pass or short leave is not by itself evidence that the individual no longer needs to be in a skilled nursing facility for the receipt of required skill care. If a facility tries to tell you that a short leave will result in the loss of Medicare coverage, please inform them that this notification is not appropriate. If the resident returns to the facility by midnight, the facility can bill Medicare for the day’s stay. This will make for enjoyable holidays for our elderly citizens.

To view the entire flyer, please click here.

Illinois Leads Nation with Most Unsafe Black Nursing Homes

The Reporter analyzed data from the U.S. Government Accountability Office which listed 580 of the nation’s most unsafe facilities among roughly 16,000 nursing homes in the U.S. 53 of these homes had predominately black residents. Of these 53 facilities, 12 of them were from Illinois which makes us the leading state in the nation. The Chicago Reporter found that of Illinois’ 51 majority-black nursing homes, 24 percent appeared on the federal list for having the worst safety records. This is in contrast to the 5 percent of the state’s white nursing homes that appeared on this least. The Reporter found that the disparities also occurred at a national level. While black nursing homes represent just 5 percent of the state’s nursing homes in the nation, they represent 10 percent of homes on the government’s list of unsafe homes. No other racial or ethnic group was overrepresented in that way. It becomes even worse in Chicago where nearly one in four black nursing homes were listed as being among the most safe unsafe in the nation. They are all located on the south side of the city. The seven homes are: Alden Wentworth Rehab and Health Care Center, All Faith Pavilion, Avenue Care Center, Belhaven Nursing and Rehab Center, Rainbow Beach Care Center, Renaissance Park South, and South Shore Nursing and Rehab Center. To learn more about the disparities in nursing homes, click the link.

Temp Firms have become a Magnet for Unfit Nurses

Firms that supply temporary nurses to the nation’s hospitals are taking perilous shortcuts in their screening and supervision, which is putting seriously ill patients in the hands of incompetent caregivers. There is a chronic nursing shortage which makes nursing homes look towards temp agencies for help. However, these agencies have become havens for nurses who hopscotch from place to place to avoid the consequences of their misconduct. The agencies have skimped on background checks or ignored warnings from hospitals about sub-par nurses on their payrolls. Fill-in nurses have histories of falling asleep on the job, failed to perform critical texts and stolen drugs from the nursing home. Sometimes the nurses lie on their application. Studies have found that nursing homes with high staff turnover are more likely to have nursing home negligence. To read more about the temp nursing agencies, please click the link.

Illinois Nursing Home Blamed for Resident’s Sepsis

A woman wrongfully died after employees at an Illinois nursing home allowed her pressure sores to deteriorate, which caused sepsis to flow throughout her blood. Her relatives have now filed a nursing home lawsuit in St. Clair County Court against Caseyville Nursing and Rehabilitation Center and Caseyville Property. At the time of the victim’s admission, she had three stage II pressure sores on her buttocks and one pressure sore on each of her heels. However, by the time of her discharge from the rehabilitation center she had three stage IV pressure sores on her buttocks and multiple pressure sores on her heels. She sustained personal injures which led to the development and deterioration of her pressure sores on her buttocks and bilateral heels which led to the sepsis throughout her bloodstream. She wrongfully died due to sepsis and acute respiratory failure. The nursing home negligence lawsuit claims that before her death she experienced severe pain and suffering, mental anguish, emotional distress and loss of dignity. To read more about the Illinois nursing home lawsuit, check out the story.

Nurses’ Aides Sued for Nursing Home Abuse

A surveillance camera captured images of nursing home abuse in what is being considered the second-worst elder care facility in the nation. This nursing home was owned by Extendicare, a nation-wide nursing home corporation. Last year a hidden camera at the nursing home caught images of nursing home abuse inflicted on an 84-year-old resident by nursing aides. Assistants were seen physically abusing and taunting the Alzheimer’s patient. The nursing aides were also shown refusing to feed or bathe the resident. Three nurse’s aids were charged with elderly abuse and the family has filed a nursing home lawsuit. In order to learn more about the nursing home abuse lawsuit, please click the link.

Be Careful When Choosing a Nursing Home

Choosing a nursing home should be a carefully thought out process, yet it is usually done in a rush after a loved one is about to be discharged from a hospital. However, medical reporter Lee Bowman has some advice on how to choose a nursing home. First, start with the U.S. Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services’ Nursing Home Compare, a database that ranks 15,700 nursing home facilities on a star system. Around 12 to 13 percent of nursing homes have the top rating, slightly more than 20 percent the lowest. Experts recommend finding a nursing home close to the patient’s home for the simple reason that it’s easier for family and friends to visit. He suggests meeting the home administrator and inspecting the home’s public areas for upkeep and cleanliness. One way to ensure that nursing home abuse will be diminished is to look for longevity among the key caregivers. To read more strategies about nursing home care, please click the link.

Nursing Home Aide will Serve 20 Months in Hidden Camera Abuse Case

A former nursing home aide has been sentenced to 20 months in jail after hidden cameras caught her abusing a paralyzed stroke victim at a nursing home facility earlier this year. The 30-year-old woman took the sentence as part of a plea agreement. Police arrested her in July on charges of felony abuse. There was a video of the aggressor physically abusing the woman. The camera captured two separate occasions where the employee was abusing the woman. During one incident the employee forced the woman out of her wheelchair, striking her three times on the arm before slinging her onto the bed. The force caused the woman to hit her head on the headboard. During another incident, the employee picked up a doll the victim had in her lap and struck her with it. Both episodes of nursing home abuse were totally unprovoked. Physical abuse is a very troubling form of nursing home abuse. To find out more about the physical abuse, please click the link.

Waukegan Nursing Home Resident Missing

Waukegan police are asking for the public’s help in finding a nursing home resident who has been missing for a week. The 47-year-old has been missing since November 25 when he was given a 10-day pass to leave the Glen Lakes Terrace Nursing Home in Waukegan, Illinois. He was reportedly going to his mother’s home for Thanksgiving. He suffers from mental health issues, but is not considered to be dangerous. It is important to closely monitor nursing home residents. To read more about the nursing home patient, please click the link.

New Nursing Home Concern is Unregistered Sex Offenders

In the last year, Chicagoans have learned that senior citizens are living in nursing homes that are understaffed and occupied by sex offenders. A new Chicago Tribune report shows that there are many unregistered sex offenders living at the Illinois nursing homes as well. Less than 33 percent of Illinois’ nearly 200 sex offenders in the state’s nursing homes have registered the sex offenders on the online registry. A Chicago Reporter analysis shows that there is a disproportionate amount of offenders live in homes where the majority of the residents are black. To read more about the problems in Chicago nursing homes, please click the link.

Death in Nursing Home Shows how Violence Can Spill into the Neighborhoods

Crimes are being committed by residents of Chicago nursing homes throughout the Uptown and Edgewater neighborhoods. Illinois is a unique state because it allows nursing homes to house younger adults with mental illness patients including several thousand felons. The Chicago lakefront communities of Uptown and Edgewater contain the state’s densest concentration of mentally ill and criminal nursing home residents. In a 2-square-mile section of the neighborhoods, 11 facilities housed 318 convicted felons and 1,350 people with mental illness. Also most of these nursing homes have substandard nursing staff levels and care. This creates a great deal of both nursing home negligence and abuse. To read more about how Chicago nursing homes house mentally ill patients, please click the link.

Illinois Nursing Home Ratings Website Offers Free Membership

The holiday season is a time for giving, and, Gunther's Grades would like to offer three months of free membership to all new members during the month of December. For information on how to take advantage of this holiday special, go to www.gunthersgrades.com.

Gunther's Grades is a web meeting place where caregivers, families and friends can access, rate and share information regarding long-term care and facilities in Illinois.

Visit Gunther's Grades to view ratings of Illinois nursing homes submitted by other families and caregivers.

Illinois Jury Declares Nursing Home Neglect

A jury found that Rosewood Care Center of Joliet, Illinois was responsible for the death of an elderly resident. The victim died after suffering a huge bedsore that ate through her skin to the bone. The jury awarded $51,000 to the victim of the nursing home neglect. The victim died at age 88 after undergoing a procedure to remove bedsores and treat bone infections brought on by her confinement to her bed and her exposure to urine and other bodily fluids during her care. The victim has a hole in her backside the size of a fist. The bedsore was the contributing factor in the victim’s death. If you would like to read more about the nursing home verdict, please click the link.