Nursing home deaths were not merciful

September 26th, 2008 by Jennifer Walker-Journey

A truly disturbing report out of this week. A series of suspicious at a Chicago-suburban nursing home in 2006, the so-called “mercy killings” of one nurse, now appear to be ruthless murders committed by a caregiver who became “fed up” with certain patients.

According to The Daily Herald, a 15-month investigation into the at the Woodstock Residence in Woodstock, Ill., led to the indictment in April of two nurses – Marty Himebaugh of Lake in the Hills, Ill., and her supervisor, Penny Whitlock of Woodstock, Ill. Himebaugh faces charges of , obtaining morphine by fraud and unlawful distribution of a controlled substance. Whitlock was charged with and obstructing justice. Woodstock Residence has since changed management and is now called Crossroads Care Center of Woodstock, according to the Chicago Tribune.

The Tribune also states that the health department report does not specifically name Himebaugh or Whitlock, however the criminal indictment suggests that the two nurses are the ones involved in the investigation. An Department of Public Health report Himebaugh administered drugs such as morphine to restless patients to calm them and gave overdoses to others she deemed had lived long enough. The report is based on interviews with coworkers, some of whom voiced concerns as much as six months before Himebaugh was let go in the wake of police investigations.

Whitlock, a former director of nursing at Woodstock Residence, reportedly told Himebaugh, “I don’t care if you’re the angel of death, just don’t let me know about it,” according to The Daily Herald.

  • http://www.nursinghome-legal.com/news/2008/10/17/nursing-home-investigation-impacts-coroner-race/ Nursing Home Abuse: Nursing home investigation impacts coroner race | Beasley Allen

    [...] posts:Nursing home deaths were not mercifulTags: Ill., McHenry County, nursing home, Woodstock [...]

  • Anonymous

    Nursing is a great profession.A nurse must be more responsible and also strict to follow guidelines.We usually find a nurse as a soft-hearten server, not killer. I claim to investigate the issue. Obviously it need to punished the guilty.
    Thanks-
    your granny
    ~Laura:(

blog comments powered by Disqus

Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.