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Charpentier Law Firm Blog

December 12, 2011

STATE MOVES TO SHUT DOWN ALFs

Posted under: Medical, Medical Malpractice, martime elderly — Charpentier Steve @ 8:35 am

An article by Michael Sallah and Carol Marbin Miller in the October 30, 2011 edition of THE MIAMI HERALD, reports disturbing incidences of abuse and neglect in Florida Assisted Living Facilities prompting a probe of three dozen homes by state agents in the longest crackdown on Florida’s assisted-living facilities in a decade. For five months, state regulators have been slapping the state’s harshest actions on dozens of homes, forcing the shutdown of 10 troubled facilities.

Prompted by a Miami Herald series showing the state was failing to close bad homes, the Agency for Health Care Administration began cutting state dollars and banning new residents from a dozen facilities. Now, the state is moving to strip the licenses of at least 34 homes — nearly doubling the rate before the crackdown — after finding that residents were in danger.

 

“People did not have to suffer like that,” said Broward County mental health court Judge Ginger Lerner-Wren. “It’s been a long time in coming.” State inspectors have been sweeping across Florida to investigate a wave of complaints, including caretakers starving residents, failing to give them crucial drugs and in one case, beating them.

At least a dozen times during the state crackdown, inspectors found caretakers breaking the law, including two stealing from mentally ill residents, one altering medical records, and two others running homes so filthy and decrepit they were unsafe. When agents arrived at Kipling Manor in July, they found a frail woman roaming the halls soaked in urine and a man suffering from depression and multiple sclerosis shaking and pleading for help after caregivers failed to give him crucial drugs to relieve the disease symptoms. They also discovered a home administrator failed to pass a background screening, but was still allowed to work — and was later caught stealing money from a resident. It wasn’t the first time AHCA turned up problems at the Pensacola facility. During the past five years, inspectors found major violations — enough to press for a shutdown in 2008 — but settlements were later reached letting it stay open. A hearing is set in November on the latest action.

In nearly every case of AHCA moving to pull a home’s license, inspectors found major violations, including caretakers leaving frail elders in danger.

Time and again, inspectors found dangerous practices and hazards during the clampdown on homes, including Sunshine Acres Loving Care in the Panhandle, where raw sewage was spewing onto the property and residents were forced to shower with contaminated well water. The 54-bed home was shut down in July after a long history of neglect and abuse.

Though AHCA is now trying to revoke dozens of licenses, the cases could drag on for months, causing some elder advocates concern about whether the top regulator will settle cases. In five homes now being targeted, AHCA had filed notices to strip the homes’ licenses in prior years, but backed off, letting them keep their doors open.

Lerner-Wren said the agency’s history of settlements weakens its efforts to close rogue homes. “A strict liability standard — without bureaucratic discretion” is needed, said Wren, who has long pushed for bad owners to be criminally charged. “There’s due process, and then there’s enabling a culture of indifference and neglect … they have to get tough.”

Though AHCA found enough violations to shut down 70 facilities in 2008 and 2009, the agency closed just seven. The Herald also found that in 2009 — the same year lawmakers expanded AHCA’s power to levy fines — the agency could have imposed more than $6 million, but took in just $650,000.

 

In an interview with The Herald last month, AHCA Secretary Elizabeth Dudek said she agreed with a recent legislative study that says her agency should take harsher actions, like suspensions, when it finds egregious abuses. “A hard and fast line sometimes might be a good thing,” she said.

Last month’s closing of the Munne Center in Miami-Dade, one of the state’s most notorious ALFs, came after years of lobbying by ombudsmen who say the state took too long.

“We spent years begging AHCA to close it, and what did they do? Nothing,” said Don Hering, deputy secretary of the state Department of Elderly Affairs, during a meeting in Miami two weeks ago Bentley Lipscomb, former secretary of Elder Affairs, said AHCA needs to take a hard line, but in the end, the Legislature needs to accept responsibility. “[The Legislature] needs to establish standards, and they need to make people live up to them,” said Lipscomb. “In the final analysis, this is laid on their door step.’’

If you or someone that you care about has been injured or neglected in a nursing home, you need a legal team that will fight for you and your rights every step of the way. To speak with members of the Charpentier Law Firm about your case and to find out how we can help, contact our Central Florida personal injury attorneys today.

March 4, 2011

Angioplasty is the Most Popular Surgery in Brevard County Florida

Posted under: Medical Malpractice — Charpentier Steve @ 9:20 am

Florida Today-February 22, 2011-Susan Jenks- According to this article the most common surgeries in Brevard County are as follows:

1. Angioplasty: 1472

2. Cesarean Section Delivery: 1445

3. Knee Replacements: 1405

4. Spinal Fusions: 1398

5. Hip Replacements: 973

6. Cardiac Catheterizations: 835

7. Hysterectomy 617

8. Laproscopic Gallbladders: 596

These figures are pursuant to the Florida Agency for Health Care Administration for the time period of July 2009 through June 2010 based on total hospitalizations.

For more information on Medical Malpractice Click Here: http://www.brevardlawyer.com/html/medical-malpractice.html

February 11, 2011

Medical Malpratice

Posted under: Medical Malpractice — Charpentier Steve @ 7:06 am

Florida Fourth District Court Appeal Rules that Patient Falling from Hospital Stretcher is Subject to Medical Malpractice Pre-suit Requirement.

Indian River Memorial Hospital V. Browne, 44 So. 2nd 237 (FLA. 4th DCA 9-29-10)

For more information on Medical Malpractice Click Here: http://www.brevardlawyer.com/html/medical-malpractice.html

February 9, 2011

Federal Middle District Court in Florida Holds that Caps on Medical Malpractice Non- Economic Damages are Constitutional

Posted under: Medical Malpractice — Charpentier Steve @ 7:19 am

In a medical malpractice wrongful death suit, the defendant of the United States of America asserted that Florida’s cap on non-economic damages were valid and constitutional. The survivors of the deceased patient move to strike the affirmative defense on a number of constitutional grounds. Siting a opinion from the Federal Court in the Northern District of Florida, the Federal Middle District Court denied the motion to strike and ruled that the non-economic damages cap does not violate access to courts.

For more information Medical Malpractice Click Here: http://www.brevardlawyer.com/html/medical-malpractice.html

January 28, 2011

Is Your Surgeon Sleep-Deprived?

Posted under: Medical Malpractice — Charpentier Steve @ 1:19 pm

Wall Street Journal-December 29, 2010 (Kathryn Hobson)-This article points out that sleep deprivation hurts physician performance. The real issue is what to do about it. One suggestion is that patients be “empowered to acquire about the amount of sleep their clinicians have had the night before such procedures.” Another solution, in the alternative, is to train surgeons “to understand how fatigue degrades their mental and physical capabilities. They should learn to use this knowledge and determine whether they should disclose their condition to patients, whether operations should be rescheduled and whether they should seek assistance.”

For more information on Medical Malpractice Click Here: http://www.brevardlawyer.com/html/medical-malpractice.html

December 9, 2010

Recent Study Finds that Hospital Safety Still Lags

Posted under: Medical Malpractice — Charpentier Steve @ 11:50 am

New York Times (November 25, A1 Grady) In this study the New York Times reported that efforts “to make hospitals safer for patients are falling short, researchers report in the first large study in a decade to analyze harm for medical care and to track it over time.” The study, “conducted from 2002 to 2007 in ten North Carolina hospitals found that harm to patients was common and that the number of incidents did not decrease over time. The most common problems were complications from procedures or drugs in a hospital acquired infections.” Apparently this study is “one of the most rigorous efforts to collect data about patients safety since a landmark report in 1999 found that medical mistakes caused as many as 98,000 deaths and more than one million injuries a year in the United States.”

For more information on Medical Malpractice Click Here: http://www.brevardlawyer.com/html/medical-malpractice.html

August 30, 2010

Actor Denis Quaid and his Wife File Suite After their Infant Twins Nearly Died

Posted under: Medical Malpractice — Charpentier Steve @ 6:41 am

AARP-September/October 2010-According to this article family actor Denis Quaid has sued Baxter for negligence. This case is currently pending. Mr. and Mrs. Quaid previously settled with Cedars Sinai when, according to Quaid, the hospital agreed to make changes to prevent such an overdose from occurring again. The Quaid’s nearly lost their infant twins from an accidental drug overdose November of 2007.

For more information on Medical Malpractice Click Here: http://www.brevardlawyer.com/html/medical-malpractice.html

August 27, 2010

When it Comes to Cholesterol Keep Numbers in Mind

Posted under: Medical Malpractice — Charpentier Steve @ 8:05 am

When it comes to cholesterol keep numbers in mind: as to overall cholesterol optimal reading is one that is less than 200mg-dl. Boarder line high is in the 200-239mg-dl range. Anything over 240mg-dl is consider high. As to LDL (bad cholesterol) and optimal number is one less than 100mg-dl. Boarder line high is in the range of 130-159 mg-dl and anything greater than 160mg-dl is consider high. Finally, as to HDL (good cholesterol) an ideal reading is one greater than 60mg-dl.

For more information on Medical Malpractice Click Here: http://www.brevardlawyer.com/html/medical-malpractice.html

August 26, 2010

Prescription Drugs that have a Potential for Harm

Posted under: Medical Malpractice — Charpentier Steve @ 5:04 am

According to a recent article (AARP Magazine, September/October 2010) three classes of medications of a anti-coagulant (Warfarin, Aspirin, Colpidogrel), anti-diabetic agents (insulin, Metformin, Glyburide, Glipizide, Chlorpropamide), and narrow therapeutic agents (Digoxin, Phenytoin, Lithium, Theophylline, Valproic Acid)-account for almost 50% of all emergency-room visits for adverse drug events in older individuals. Other medications that cause problems for seniors include barbiturates Meprobamate and Amitriptyline.

For more information on Medical Malpractice Click Here: http://www.brevardlawyer.com/html/medical-malpractice.html

July 13, 2010

Four Ways to Slim Down

Posted under: Medical Malpractice — Charpentier Steve @ 6:45 am

USA Today-June 16, 2010-Naci Hellmich-According to this article approximately 2/3 of adults and 1/3 of children in the United States are overweight or obese. An advisory committee on dietary guidelines for Americans Recommends four major ways to lose weight:

1. Cut calorie intake and increase physical activity

2. Shift to a plant-based diet, increase the intake of seafood and consume only moderate amounts of meats, poultry and eggs

3. Significantly reduce the intake of foods containing added sugars and solid fats

4. Meet minimum physical activity guidelines

For more information on Medical Malpractice Click Here: http://www.brevardlawyer.com/html/medical-malpractice.html

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