Video surveillance leads to more arrests at NY nursing home

November 3rd, 2008 by Jennifer Walker-Journey

Video surveillance from hidden cameras set up in a New York nursing home has lead to more arrests, according to the North Country Gazette.

Early last month we reported that four employees of Medford Multicare Center for Living in Medford, NY were charged with criminal after investigators reviewed tapes from video cameras hidden in some residents’ rooms.

The videos showed that one patient wasn’t turned and positioned to prevent painful pressure sores or given range-of-motion exercises to keep his muscles from contracting. One patient also didn’t receive water through his feeding tube – his only means of hydration. The staff charged with the also administered heart medication without first checking his pulse rate, which could have resulted in an adverse response in his medication. And rather than changing his briefs every two hours as per doctors’ orders, the patient was left to sit in his waste for hours. The video also showed that the resident had not been bathed in a week.

Hidden video surveillance is not an uncommon practice in New York and has lead to numerous convictions of employees. Last week, New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo announced that more hidden cameras will be installed in the rooms of patients in western New York in an effort to curtail and against the elderly.

The most recent arrests include two licensed practical nurses (LPN) and two certified nurse’s aides (CNA) at the same Medford facility. The charges include endangering the welfare of a physically disabled person by failing to provide basic standard care and falsifying business records.

One of the LPNs, Kim Purdum, was charged with falsifying business records based on evidence unrelated to the video surveillance. Purdum is accused of changing a resident’s chart to conceal that she had not done the necessary blood tests to monitor her blood thinning medication. This caused the resident to suffer internal bleeding and extensive external bruising. The patient required immediate emergency medical attention.

  • ron
    I support the use of hidden cameras in working places, but these nursing homes are also the residence of patients, so I think they should agree to its use, or at least be aware of it
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