News Tagged ‘nursing homes

FDA warns of death, complications from type of wound therapy

nursinghome photo 150x150Reports of deaths and serious complications in patients who have been treated with Negative Pressure Wound Therapy (NPWT) systems has resulted in a warning to acute and long-term health care facilities staff and consumers by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

NPWT is a topical negative pressure, sub-atomospheric pressure dressing or vacuum sealing technique generally indicated for the management of wounds, burns, ulcers, flaps and graphs. NPWT apply negative pressure to the wound in order to remove fluids, including wound exudates, irrigation fluids and infectious materials. The system is thought to benefit wounds healing by removing wound fluid and dessicated tissue, decreasing the level of bacteria in the wound, improving blood flow in the wound and surrounding tissue, promote granulation tissue, and pulling the wound edges together and stimulating cell growth.

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June 15 is World Elder Abuse Awareness Day

More than a million senior citizens suffer from or in a single year, many of whom live in , according to the National Center on Elder . For every case reported to authorities, more than five go unreported. These startling statistics have rallied the eldercare advocacy group International Network for the Prevention of Elder (INPEA) to declare a day to raise awareness of the cultural, social, economic and demographic process affecting elder and through community events aimed at promoting understanding of and of older persons.

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Maggots found crawling out of nursing home resident’s leg cast

Florida state regulators have recently fined Azalea Court nursing home in West Palm Beach, Florida $16,000 after a patient was found on the floor with maggots crawling out of his leg cast, according to On Call with Phil Galewitz, from the Palm Beach Post.

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Nursing homes that jeopardize safety no longer face fines in Iowa

nomoney 100x100Iowa Governor Chet Culver signed a bill in to law this week that removes fines imposed on that do not meet minimum health and safety standards, according to the Des Moines Register.

Under the new law, would no longer be fined for not having competent, licensed administrators or caregivers in their facilities; not having a qualified nurse on duty, or for understaffing at the facility, one of the leading contributors to resident .

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Kentucky investigators urge nursing homes to ban cell phones

cellphone 100x100Members of the staff at Bluegrass Care and Rehabilitation Center in Lexington, Kentucky, didn’t think their joke would get out of hand. They would attach sexually explicit song lyrics to photos of residents taken with their cell phone cameras and send them as text messages to other employees. “We were just having fun,” an employee told state investigators. “Everybody was on the cell phone 24/7.”

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Advocate wants federal nursing home database to include abuse cases

Nursing home advocate Wes Bledsoe wants the federal government to change the way it rates on its Web site Medicare. gov, to accurately reflect the quality of care at , according to the Albert Lea Tribune.

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Study: Hispanic nursing homes provide lower quality of care

elderly hispanic man 100x100 that serve primarily Hispanic residents provide a lower quality of care compared to that cater to a mostly white clientele, according to a Brown University study. The research, which was recently published in the Journal of the American Medical Directors Association, looked at the rate of bedsores at in select states and found that residents in with a larger concentration of Hispanic residents reported having more bedsores than with lower concentrations of Hispanic residents.

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Nursing home group must pay Latino workers in discrimination lawsuit

Latinos who worked in California and Texas owned by Skilled Healthcare Group Inc. who claimed they were punished for speaking Spanish while at work will receive up to $450,000, free English classes and other compensation under a consent decree from a class-action lawsuit filed by the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in Los Angeles, according to the Los Angeles Times.

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Eldercare advocate rallies family members to fight for better care

wes bledsoe1 96x100Eldercare advocate Wes Bledsoe stood among nearly 100 residents from Hot Springs, South Dakota last week, and rallied them to take action and change federal and state guidelines that impede speedy reporting of incidents that harm vulnerable elderly in the state’s .

The meeting was his second since early last month, when he held a town hall meeting with an audience of more than 200 focusing on recent allegations of sexual abuse of residents at Castle Manor by a nursing home aide at the home. According to family members, it took days for the to file the sexual claims with the Department of Health, and the accused abuser continued to work at the home for weeks after the initial complaint was made.

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Nursing home chain accused of substandard, life-threatening care

A lawsuit filed on behalf of a class of thousands of residents at 27 Colorado operated by SavaSeniorCare claims that state officials allowed the to operate without insurance in violation of state law, leaving residents without means to sue when they are abused and neglected, according to the Denver Post.

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