Tag Archive 'elder abuse'

Oct 10 2009

Action Underway to Address Felons Working in Nursing Homes

A few weeks ago, I posted a story about felons working in Florida nursing homes.  Thanks to that series of articles in the South Florida Sun-Sentinel, Florida’s attorney general is getting involved.

Here’s the latest article from the Sun Sentinel’s Sally Kestin:

Florida’s attorney general has ordered a review of a state system that allows convicted felons to work in day care and nursing homes, after a Sun Sentinel investigative series.

In a letter to legislators this week, Bill McCollum said the series highlighted the “disastrous results” of Florida’s exemption process that has cleared more than 8,700 people with criminal pasts to work as caregivers of children, seniors and the disabled.

A Central Florida woman with a record for aggravated assault won an exemption from the state to work in a nursing home, where she stole $36,000 from patients, the newspaper reported.

“With her violent criminal background, she should have never been given the opportunity to work in a position of trust,” McCollum wrote. The Republican official directed his staff to review existing laws and policies and make recommendations before the Legislature convenes in March.

Legislators are already working on changes to state law to restrict who can receive an exemption and for what crimes. One proposed bill would ban people with records for violence and fraud from ever getting clearance to work as a caregiver.

The Legislature created exemptions two decades ago as a second chance for people with long-ago or minor offenses in their past.

But the Sun Sentinel’s “Trust Betrayed” series found the state also granted exemptions to career criminals and people convicted of rape, kidnapping and murder. A dozen registered sex offenders were cleared to work along with 200 people charged with harming children.

Research in Florida has found that as many as half of convicted felons commit more crimes within five years of their release, said Joe Jacquot, the attorney general’s chief of staff.

“The state shouldn’t give people the opportunity to do so,” he said.

Lawmakers have also pledged to fix other problems identified by the Sun Sentinel series. Caregivers would have to pass a nationwide background check before they could begin working with children, the elderly or disabled, under proposed legislation.

Now, many caregivers undergo a criminal history search in Florida only, and can be on the job several months before the results come back.

The reforms have the support of George Sheldon, secretary of Florida’s Department of Children & Families. Sheldon has written a four-page letter to lawmakers outlining his plan to tighten screening requirements and exemptions, and met with legislative leaders this week.

The newspaper series “really made a tremendous difference in people’s resolve to address these issues,” said state Sen. Nan Rich, D-Weston. “I think this is just going to be a no-brainer.”

Sally Kestin can be reached at skestin@SunSentinel.com or 954-356-4510.

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Sep 30 2009

Felons Working In Florida Nursing Homes? Newspaper Investigation Finds Yes

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Sep 15 2009

Jacksonville Nursing Home Employee Charged with Sexual Abuse

The Florida Department of Children and Families is investigating an alleged case of sexual abuse of an elderly resident at a Jacksonville nursing home. The Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office arrested 35-year-old Anthony Mgugua Njorge early Sunday morning at Regents Park nursing home. He is charged with sexual battery on a mentally impaired and physically helpless victim.

The latest inspection report of Regents Park, conducted by the Florida Agency on Health Care Administration in August, gives the facility just one star out of five in most categories. According to the AHCA website, “The fewer stars a facility receives, the more the facility was found to be in noncompliance with the regulations governing nursing homes.” The Federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services also publishes a Nursing Home Compare web site that provides additional information to compare nursing homes in Florida and the nation.

In this particular incident, a witness told police she heard something from one of the rooms, and when she went in she saw Njorge engaged in a sexual activity with a woman in the room. The woman is disabled.The witness told police she reached for her cell phone, but Njorge tried to stop her.She was able to make a call and someone else came into the room. That witness told police she saw Njorge cleaning up and then throw something in the disposal room.

DCF Spokesperson John Harrell says his agency has investigated eight allegations of abuse at Regents Park in the past year, though none have been verified.

“Of those eight reports, four showed no findings, but four had some findings, including inadequate supervision [of patients]. That happened a couple of times,” Harrell said.

Njorge also worked at Life Care Center, another Southside nursing home. DCF is now looking into whether the attack is an isolated incident.Police are withholding any further information due to the nature of the crime and the investigation. Njorge remains in jail on a $500,000 bond.

Florida Senior Living Advisor offers a complete searchable database of all senior living facilities in Florida, including nursing homes, assisted living facilities, adult day care centers, skilled nursing units, independent living, continuing care retirement communities and hospice. As part of your research on particular facilities, you can check their rating in the AHCA guide; of course, you should always visit and inspect a facility in person before making such an important decision.

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Aug 04 2009

Abuse Charge at Ft. Lauderdale Nursing Home

I am trying to vary the topics for my Florida Senior Living Advisor blog, from the lighthearted to the more serious, but all with a focus on topics of interest or importance to senior citizens, their caregivers and family members. One topic I will always address is any instance of elder abuse that I hear about at a Florida senior living facility. And unfortunately, there seems to be plenty of material on this topic.

In the less than three months since I launched Florida Senior Living Advisor, this is now the fourth incidence of abuse that I am reporting. In this most recent case, a Broward County woman faces charges of abuse of an elderly person after she allegedly attacked a 65-year-old patient at the Manor Pines Nursing and Rehabilitation Center in Fort Lauderdale. To make matters worse, the patient suffers from Parkinson’s disease.

Eronie Deverlus, 50, was arrested a few days ago by law enforcement officers with the Attorney General’s Medicaid Fraud Control Unit. According to Sandi Copes, a spokeswoman for Florida Attorney General Bill McCollum, Deverlus was a nursing assistant at Manor Pines and While working at the center, she allegedly struck the female patient in the face after becoming angry with the woman.

Deverlus, who was fired shortly after the incident, is charged with one count of abuse of an elderly person, a third-degree felony. If convicted, she faces up to five years in prison and a $5,000 fine.

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Jun 02 2009

Nursing Home Complaint Center Launched

The nationally renowned advocacy group, Americas Watchdog, has created the Nursing Home Complaint Center to draw attention to senior citizens suffering wrongful death, abuse and neglect. America’s Watchdog describes itself as a “National Advocacy Group for Consumer Protection and Corporate Fair Play.” It’s the same group that has been helping to lead the charge against allegedly toxic Chinese drywall. They have also received attention for their Mortgage Inspection Service, intended to keep consumers from being cheated or overcharged when they finance or refinance their home.

According to America’s Watchdog,”once our legal team is in place, the Nursing Home Complaint Center will focus weekly press releases on elder abuse, Medicare or Medicaid fraud, Class Actions, or Wage and Hour investigations.”

They are interested in the following issues:

  • Nursing homes not providing patients with minimum time per day.
  • Nursing homes over billing Medicare for testing that was never done.
  • Nursing homes not changing patients for a 24 hour period of time. (the patient then gets septic infections and then they often die)
  • Nursing-home care firms that, instead of sending an actual nurse, send a undocumented worker to spend the day with the patient.
  • Nursing homes not paying overtime to their employees, or abiding by fair labor laws.
  • Possible class issues related to standard of care, drug costs, testing schemes, etc.

I will be interested to see what develops from this group. Unfortunately, I suspect they won’t have any trouble finding complaints against nursing homes to try to splash all over the evening news. Certainly there are many wonderful nursing homes throughout Florida and the entire country that are providing quality care and service to patients. But I also think that in many of these facilities, employees are overworked, underpaid and not monitored closely enough. Maybe just the creation of this complaint center will be enough to get some nursing homes to pay closer attention to safety, quality and customer service.

We’ll see. I’ll report back as I learn of updates from America’s Watchdog.

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