Wednesday, June 3, 2026

Guardianship rights may have fueled woman's actions for allegedly shooting 2 lawyers outside courthouse

By Shirley Henderson 

Disappointment over losing guardianship rights over her mother may have fueled the actions of a North Carolina woman who has been accused of the nonfatal shooting of two lawyers outside a courthouse following a hearing for a civil case.

Gwendolyn White, 57, of Raleigh, North Carolina, was recently arrested and charged with two counts of attempted first-degree murder for allegedly shooting Mary Harris and Jeffrey Whitley—two Fox Rothschild lawyers representing the Rolesville Police Department in North Carolina.

White “became belligerent in court” and was reportedly ordered to leave the courtroom of the Wake County Courthouse in Raleigh, North Carolina. Witnesses said allegedly she went to her car to get a gun and returned to the courthouse where both lawyers were exiting the building. They are expected to recover from their wounds, according to coverage by Law.com and WRAL.

During White’s court appearance following the shooting, she expressed concern about her mother, Elleen White, not receiving proper care. In 2024, Wake County Health and Human Services sought to find a third-party guardian for Elleen White, noting that regarding Gwendolyn White, there were “concerns about caretaker neglect and the fitness of the caretaker to continue serving in that role,” according to court documents.

Posts on social media and filings in court show that White believed that the Rolesville Police Department was involved in “a racist conspiracy” to kill her and her mother, who died last year at age 90 in a nursing home, according to the Raleigh News & Observer

Full Article & Source:
Guardianship rights may have fueled woman's actions for allegedly shooting 2 lawyers outside courthouse

See Also:
Woman accused of shooting two attorneys failed in caring for elderly mother, court documents show

SAPD: Nursing assistant accused of exploiting 79-year-old woman at nursing home with Alzheimer’s

Nate Kotisso, Digital Journalist
Katrina Webber, Reporter

Destiny Lashell Houston, 36, is facing 3 felonies, records show

San Antonio police arrested Destiny Houston, who investigators believe paid for personal items with a debit card that belonged to a 79-year-old resident at a North Side nursing home. (Bexar County Sheriff's Office)

SAN ANTONIO – Police arrested a certified nursing assistant who investigators believe paid for personal items with a debit card that belonged to a 79-year-old resident at a North Side nursing home.

The San Antonio Police Department took Destiny Lashell Houston, 36, into custody Tuesday afternoon on the following charges, which are all considered third-degree felonies:

  • Exploitation of an elderly individual
  • Abuse of a credit card or debit card belonging to an elderly individual
  • Fraudulent use or possession of items belonging to an elderly individual

At the time of the alleged crimes, police said Houston worked directly with the victim as a certified nursing assistant at The Forum at Lincoln Heights, a nursing home located in the 300 block of Nottingham Drive.

‘Numerous purchases’

Authorities said the victim, who was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease in 2024, moved into the facility’s mental care unit in June 2025. Due to the diagnosis, the victim’s daughter is in charge of her mother’s financial accounts in order to pay bills and monitor expenses, the affidavit states.

In August 2025, the victim’s daughter checked one of the accounts and noticed “numerous purchases” were made with the victim’s debit card over multiple days, according to police. SAPD said one purchase was made at a vending machine inside the nursing home’s employee lounge. 

After checking her mother’s wallet, investigators said her daughter learned that the victim’s cards were missing and subsequently filed a report with SAPD.

Suspect denies allegations

Detectives said they obtained surveillance videos and photos of Houston from several stores where the debit card was used. Investigators showed the pictures to supervisors at the nursing home, who identified Houston as the woman in those photos.

In an interview with police, Houston admitted that she was the person in the surveillance photos.

However, she denied using the victim’s debit card. According to the affidavit, Houston told police that the card she used was a “gift card” she found on the floor at the nursing home.

Houston bonded out of jail just after 10 p.m. Tuesday, according to jail records. She is expected to make her next court appearance on Aug. 24. 

Full Article & Source:
SAPD: Nursing assistant accused of exploiting 79-year-old woman at nursing home with Alzheimer’s 

Tuesday, June 2, 2026

Riviera Beach man accused of exploiting grandma with severe dementia to control finances

by Grace Bellinghausen 

Police say a Riviera Beach man quietly took control of his grandmother’s home, finances, and care by exploiting her worsening dementia. (Palm Beach County Jail, Getty Images)

RIVIERA BEACH, Fla. (CBS12) — Police say a Riviera Beach man quietly took control of his grandmother’s home, finances, and care by exploiting her worsening dementia.

According to a Riviera Beach Police Department probable cause affidavit, the investigation began on February 5 after a family member reported concerns that her 71-year-old mother was being taken advantage of by her grandson, 52-year-old Roderick Mitchell.

The family member told police she had served as her mother’s power of attorney since 2006, after severe dementia left the woman unable to make major decisions.

But in 2025, she said Mitchell transferred power of attorney to himself and executed a quitclaim deed on his grandmother’s home without her knowledge.

The victim alleged Mitchell, who lived in the home, prevented family members from checking on her welfare and at times threatened to burn the house down. The allegations were referred to the Florida Department of Children and Families, which opened an elder abuse investigation.

DCF investigators determined the woman was a vulnerable adult with severe dementia, diabetes, and mobility issues requiring a walker. The report stated Mitchell acted as her caregiver but was not acting in her best interest, raising concerns about missed insulin care, alcohol use, and aggressive behavior when intoxicated.

Mitchell reportedly acknowledged to investigators that he drank alcohol and did not personally administer insulin, instead relying on others for injections. He also admitted making decisions regarding power of attorney and property without consulting the victim or family members, claiming he was protecting the home.

A doctor who had treated her since 2018 reported progressive cognitive decline and stated in a 2025 letter that she required round-the-clock care and could not manage her finances, according to documents obtained by police.

Investigators also alleged Mitchell filed a second fraudulent quitclaim deed in April 2026 listing a suspicious address tied to a junkyard. Authorities said he later invoked his right to an attorney during questioning.

Detectives ultimately charged Mitchell with multiple felonies, including exploitation of an elderly person, fraudulent use of personal identification, grand theft over $50,000, and filing false documents involving real property.

On Saturday, officers located Mitchell in Riviera Beach and arrested him without incident. He was booked and later transferred to the Palm Beach County Jail. 

Full Article & Source:
Riviera Beach man accused of exploiting grandma with severe dementia to control finances 

Missouri woman accused of exploiting elderly person out of nearly $22K

by: Nikki Nguyen 

WARRENTON, Mo. – A Warren County woman faces felony charges after investigators say she exploited an elderly person out of tens of thousands of dollars while serving as the victim’s power of attorney.

Special investigators with the Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services allege that Johnnie M. Barry used the victim’s funds for her own personal benefit between July 2022 and August 2025.

According to a probable cause statement, Barry deposited 25 unauthorized checks from the victim’s bank accounts into her personal Chase Bank account, totaling $4,726. Investigators said she used an additional $17,211.18 from the victim’s accounts to pay her own expenses, bringing the total alleged loss to $21,937.18.

In addition, Barry failed to pay the victim’s mortgage, credit card bills, and homeowners’ association dues, placing the victim at risk of foreclosure, investigators said. She’s also accused of submitting mortgage modification documents in March 2026 after her power of attorney had been revoked and signed documents on the victim’s behalf without authorization.

The victim told investigators they did not sign the checks and could not do so following multiple strokes.

The Warren County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office charged Barry with financial exploitation of an elderly/disabled person and forgery. Barry remains jailed without bond. She has a confined docket hearing scheduled for Tuesday, June 2. 

Full Article & Source:
Missouri woman accused of exploiting elderly person out of nearly $22K 

Monday, June 1, 2026

Liz Lazarus Releases New Psychological Thriller Raising Awareness of Guardianship Abuse

News Provided By
May 28, 2026, 14:15 GMT 
 

Inspired by Real Events, "Dawn Before Darkness" Arrives May 26

After a ten-year ordeal regarding guardianship of my mom, I saw firsthand how broken the system can be. It’s important for families to know that this kind of thing can — and does — happen.”
— Liz Lazarus
ATLANTA, GA, UNITED STATES, May 28, 2026 /EINPresswire.com/ -- As conversations around elder care, conservatorships and guardianship abuse continue to grow nationwide, author Liz Lazarus is using fiction to shine a light on a frightening reality many families never see coming.

In her latest psychological thriller, "Dawn Before Darkness," published this week, Lazarus connects a suspenseful stalking plot with a real-world issue affecting aging families: the risk that guardianship and conservatorship proceedings can become a legal battleground.

Published by Mitchell Cove Publishing, the novel follows Dawn Smith, a veterinary technician in rural South Carolina, who ends a relationship after discovering her new boyfriend has lied to her. When he begins stalking and harassing her in increasingly invasive ways, Dawn seeks legal protection. But the threat soon expands beyond her own safety when he uses the guardianship and conservatorship system to target Dawn’s vulnerable mother, forcing Dawn into a fight for control over her mother’s wellbeing. The result is a thriller rooted not only in psychological tension, but in the terrifying plausibility of institutional manipulation.

The novel was inspired in part by Lazarus’ own prolonged legal battle involving guardianship of her mother.

“We’ve all heard heart-wrenching stories about the court system taking children away from their parents, presumably because the adults were unfit in some way,” Lazarus said. “What I didn’t understand is that it’s also possible for the system to take the oversight of aging parents away from their adult children.”

Lazarus said her own experience revealed how difficult these cases can be for families.

“After a ten-year ordeal regarding guardianship of my mom, I saw firsthand how broken the system can be,” Lazarus said. “It’s important for families to know that this kind of thing can — and does — happen.”

While the novel is fiction, Lazarus uses the thriller form to explore issues around elder care, legal vulnerability, manipulation, stalking and the emotional cost of trying to protect a loved one when institutions built to protect the vulnerable fail.

In addition to drawing from her own guardianship battle, Lazarus interviewed women who survived stalking and harassment in order to build the psychological profile of the novel’s antagonist. “I wanted to fictionalize stories that showed how helpless victims felt and how little could be done to really protect them,” she said. “Dozens of volunteers came forward. I ended up interviewing ten women and combined their accounts to create my super villain.”

Lazarus balances the novel’s themes with emotionally grounded relationships and vivid details from veterinary medicine, another major element of the story. The novel’s clinic scenes, involving neglected pets, emergency procedures and “compassion fatigue,” grew out of conversations with real veterinary technicians. “These professionals make difficult decisions every day. Animals are mirrors of our own humanity, and in the novel, Dawn’s decisions at work reflect her overall struggle, trying to do the right thing, but coming up against limitations of what she can and cannot do for the animals under her care.”

Early reviews have noted the novel’s blend of suspense and social relevance. Midwest Book Review called "Dawn Before Darkness" an “immersive thriller” that is “replete with action, discovery, challenge, and tests of one woman’s strengths and convictions.” Rick Black, Founder of CLEAR, Center for Estate Administration Reform, praised Lazarus’ “accurate depiction of how easily the elderly can be trapped and how helpless their family can feel as they fight to protect a loved one.”

Terry Shepherd, author of The Jessica Ramirez Thrillers and host of In Conversation with Terry Shepherd, described the novel as depicting “a bureaucratic nightmare,” in which “the antagonist does not strike with fists but with filings, motions, and insinuations,” adding that the novel is “chilling precisely because it is so plausible.”

"Dawn Before Darkness" is Lazarus’ fourth novel, following "Free of Malice," "Plea for Justice" and "Shades of Silence." Her novels feature intelligent female protagonists confronting legal and emotional danger while navigating timely social issues.

"Dawn Before Darkness" is available beginning May 26, 2026. Learn more at www.lizlazarus.com.

ABOUT LIZ LAZARUS
Liz Lazarus writes fast-paced psychological thrillers featuring intelligent female protagonists confronting legal and emotional danger. She graduated from Georgia Tech with an engineering degree and earned an MBA from Northwestern’s Kellogg Graduate School of Management. She has worked as an executive at General Electric’s Healthcare division, as Managing Director at a consulting firm and as Head of Operations for a healthcare start-up. She was raised in Georgia and now splits her time between Atlanta, Georgia and Bozeman, Montana.

MEDIA CONTACT
kimfromla (at) earthlink (dot) net
www.kimfromla.com
323-655-6023

Kim Dower
Kim-From-LA
email us here

Legal Disclaimer:

EIN Presswire provides this news content "as is" without warranty of any kind. We do not accept any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright issues related to this article, kindly contact the author above. 

Full Article & Source:
Liz Lazarus Releases New Psychological Thriller Raising Awareness of Guardianship Abuse

Suspended Jefferson County probate judge accused of election interference in new lawsuit

Story by Joseph D. Bryant


A candidate who lost when she ran for the State Legislature is accusing embattled Jefferson County Probate Judge Yashiba Blanchard of impropriety during the recent election and wants a circuit court clerk to intervene.

Mara Ruffin Blackmon, who ran for House District 57, said issues warrant “immediate investigation and preservation of records to protect voter confidence and the integrity of the electoral process,” according to her complaint filed this week in the Bessemer Circuit Court. 

Blackmon in her May 22 court filing, contends that Blanchard’s association with Rep. Patrick Sellers, whom Ruffin challenged in the Democratic primary, created a conflict that prevented her from being fair.

Sellers, a Democrat from Pleasant Grove, defeated Blackmon with 61.14% to 32.79% to win a second term.

“The lawsuit is frivolous,” Sellers told AL.com Wednesday. “There was a very expressive and declarative win. We need to get back to business as usual.”

AL.com’s efforts to reach Blackmon and Blanchard were unsuccessful this afternoon.

Blackmon’s complaint lists Blanchard and Sellers by name as defendants along with unnamed election chief inspectors.

The filing is the latest controversy connected to Blanchard, and was lodged just a day after Blanchard was suspended from the bench following a 120-page state complaint that accuses her of several infractions, including bullying and other misconduct.

The probate judge is also the chief elections official in Jefferson County.

“Plaintiff alleges that Judge Yashiba Blanchard maintained a relationship with Defendant Patrick Sellers that raises concern regarding impartial election administration,” Blackmon writes.

For example, Blackmon notes that Judge Blanchard has hired two of Sellers’ sisters to her staff, including Deputy Probate Judge Jacqueline Knox, who leads the Bessemer office.

“Plaintiff alleges that these overlapping relationships are relevant to concerns regarding: impartial election administration, poll worker supervision, staffing assignments, election management and public confidence in the neutrality of election operations,” the complaint reads.

Specifically, Blackmon alleges that Blanchard invited her to dinner in January where she offered to pay Blackmon’s campaign expenses if she withdrew from the race against Sellers.

Blackmon also challenges the appropriateness of using Sellers’ church in Birmingham as a polling place, along with alleged impropriety at other sites in Birmingham and Midfield.

“Plaintiff further alleges that individuals serving as poll watchers or otherwise associated with polling activities escort voters into precincts and transported ballots to vehicles outside polling locations,” Blackmon says in her complaint.

Blanchard has been sidelined from her public duties following the state report alleging numerous violations of judicial conduct unrelated to Blackmon’s lawsuit.

While not directly related, Blackmon, in her complaint, said the state investigation should “raise additional public confidence concerns regarding election administration, impartiality, oversight and procedural integrity.” 

Full Article & Source:
Suspended Jefferson County probate judge accused of election interference in new lawsuit 

See Also:
Jefferson County judge suspended, complaint says she called herself “ultimate authority”

Glamorous judge accused of bullying, intimidation and delaying cases so she could take her DOGS for a walk 

Sunday, May 31, 2026

Woman accused of shooting two attorneys failed in caring for elderly mother, court documents show

Newly uncovered court documents reveal that prior to her arrest for shooting two lawyers outside a courthouse, Gwendolyn White was stripped of her mother's guardianship following multiple county investigations into caretaker neglect. 


By Shaun Gallagher, WRAL reporter  

Shortly before being arrested for allegedly shooting two lawyers outside of the courthouse, Gwendolyn White expressed the reason she continued her legal fight during a hearing over the release of body camera footage.

“My job right here is to get justice for her, whether you like me or not,” White can be heard during an audio recording of that hearing.

The court case had nothing to do with White’s mother. It was part of an ongoing legal battle with Rolesville Police Department over body camera footage from an incident near White’s home in 2021.

But White’s mother, Elleen, is a heavy focus of her online footprint. Specifically, her concerns that her mother’s death was caused by improper care.

But newly discovered court documents show the County believed Gwendolyn White was the one failing her mother.

Wake County Health and Human Services (WCHHS) filed a case in 2024 to find a third-party guardian for Elleen White. It cites a specific incident the month before.

Gwendolyn White dropped her mother off at the hospital in October 2024 for an issue. Nine days later, it was resolved and she was ready to be discharged but says White, “was unwilling to allow [Elleen] to come home and unwilling to work with the hospital on other discharge options.” The document continues saying, “Gwendolyn White was either unwilling or unable to agree to placement options." 

Gwendolyn White’s interactions with other facilities prevented other locations from taking in Elleen according to the court documents.

“No skilled nursing facility is currently willing to accept [Elleen] as a resident due to Gwen's documented behavior and disruption in [Elleen's] care," the document reads.

This was the fourth time WCHHS was contacted in a year and a half over, “concerns about caretaker neglect and the fitness of the caretaker to continue serving in that role,” according to court documents.

Gwendolyn White has a well-documented social media presence, claiming her mother’s death was due to poor care, including an online fundraiser calling for justice for elder abuse and neglect. It’s a fundraiser that had raised roughly $440 before last week’s shooting. It’s ballooned to over $6,000 as of Friday afternoon.

The fundraiser reads, “The Daughter has never neglected her mother period in 39 years and wouldn’t.”

However, the county court's decision indicates it disagrees with White’s sentiment.

It assigned a third-party guardian to Elleen White’s care, saying, “Elleen White is at imminent risk of harm given her daughter’s refusal to permit mother’s discharge or participate in good faith in planning said discharge.”

White’s mental health in a criminal case was also cited in these court documents related to her mother’s care.

A court order was entered on May 3, 2024, “finding Gwen was not capable of proceeding to trial” in a misdemeanor stalking case. The court ordered White to participate in the Community Based Restoration Program at Elwyn Health Resources for examination and treatment until necessary to help White gain capacity to proceed if possible.

It’s a ruling White disagreed with, saying her son lied about her mental health and that “false information was entered into her medical record,” which she was trying to have removed. 

Full Article & Source:
Woman accused of shooting two attorneys failed in caring for elderly mother, court documents show

Man from California convicted of trying to scam a 92-year-old woman in Pelham

Source:
Man from California convicted of trying to scam a 92-year-old woman in Pelham

Saturday, May 30, 2026

Long-Term Care Pharmacy Crisis Hits Nursing Homes

By Lee Pruitt

Takeaways

  • Long-term care (LTC) pharmacies — not retail drugstores — are essential to medication safety in nursing homes and other long-term care facilities.
  • Medicare drug price changes took effect January 1, 2026, cutting key LTC pharmacy reimbursements. Without a fix, pharmacies may cut staff and services or close, raising risks for residents.
  • A bipartisan bill was introduced in 2025, but as of spring 2026 it’s still stalled.

When Congress passed the Inflation Reduction Act in 2022, part of the goal was to lower prescription drug costs for Medicare patients. For millions of seniors in nursing homes and assisted living facilities, though, a little-noticed side effect of that law is starting to hinder their access to those drugs.

The Pharmacies You Haven’t Heard Of

Long-term care (LTC) pharmacies are specialized pharmacies that have no walk-in customers or front-of-store merchandise. Their sole purpose is to serve the roughly 2 million Americans who live in nursing homes, skilled nursing facilities, assisted living communities, and hospices.

They do far more than fill prescriptions. The typical nursing home resident takes an average of 13 medications. Organizing and administering them safely requires support that goes well beyond what a retail drugstore provides.

LTC pharmacies specially package medications to prevent errors, conduct monthly reviews of each resident’s full medication regimen, and maintain emergency kits and after-hours coverage. They also coordinate medication management when residents transfer in from hospitals — a critical step, since errors during those transitions are a common cause of avoidable hospital readmissions.

These critical services come at a cost. Dispensing medications to LTC residents is costlier than dispensing to retail customers, due to the specialized packaging, regulatory requirements, frequent deliveries, and mandatory 24/7 staffing. Unlike retail pharmacies, which can offset thin prescription margins with sales of snacks, greeting cards, and cosmetics, LTC pharmacies have no such cushion. Their revenue largely comes from Medicare Part D prescription reimbursements — making them uniquely vulnerable to changes in how Medicare pays for drugs.

Why LTC Pharmacies Are Essential

The people that LTC pharmacies serve are often among the most medically complex patients in the health care system. Nursing home residents commonly live with combinations of dementia, heart disease, diabetes, chronic respiratory illness, and other serious conditions. Many are physically unable to travel to a pharmacy, unable to manage their own medications, or both. For these individuals, an LTC pharmacy is essential to their daily care.

LTC pharmacies also play an important role for people with disabilities who live in long-term care settings but are not elderly. These residents may have complex medication regimens stemming from physical or neurological conditions and rely on the same specialized services.

The safety implications are substantial. Medication errors are among the most common and serious adverse events in long-term care settings. Having a dedicated pharmacist review each resident’s monthly medication list and be available around the clock for consultations provides an important safeguard against potentially dangerous mistakes. When LTC pharmacies function well, they help keep people healthier, prevent unnecessary hospitalizations, and improve quality of life for vulnerable patients.

LTC pharmacies also provide support to the nurses and aides working in these facilities. Facility staff rely on LTC pharmacies to supply medication carts, maintain emergency kits, manage complex delivery schedules, and handle the administrative burden of prescription management. Without LTC pharmacies, the workload on already-stretched staff would increase substantially.

The Inflation Reduction Act and an Unintended Consequence

The Inflation Reduction Act gave Medicare the authority, for the first time in the program’s history, to negotiate prices directly with pharmaceutical manufacturers for certain high-cost drugs. The resulting “maximum fair prices” took effect on January 1, 2026, and are estimated to reduce costs for selected drugs by roughly 38 percent to 79 percent. For Medicare patients who take those medications, that’s a genuine benefit.

For LTC pharmacies, however, it is a financial gut punch. The problem lies in how their business model works. LTC pharmacies have long relied on the margins from brand-name drug reimbursements to cross-subsidize the losses they routinely take on generic drugs, where reimbursement rates are notoriously thin.

Eight of the 10 drugs selected for the first round of Medicare price negotiations are brand-name medications heavily prescribed to nursing home residents. When the reimbursement rates for those drugs dropped sharply on January 1, 2026, LTC pharmacies lost part of the financial cushion that kept them viable — with no offsetting compensation for the specialized, federally mandated services they provide on top of dispensing the drugs.

The Senior Care Pharmacy Coalition (SCPC), the leading advocacy group for LTC pharmacies, estimated that the financial hit would be unsustainable. Without a way to make up for the lost revenue, 60 percent of its member pharmacies would be forced to close locations, 90 percent would lay off staff, and 80 percent would have to reduce services and increase fees.

A separate analysis found that pharmacy closures could ultimately cost taxpayers up to $4.8 billion in increased health care costs over the next decade, as nursing home residents lose access to the medication management services that help keep them out of the hospital.

The Bill That Wasn’t Passed in Time

In August 2025, a bipartisan group of House members introduced the Preserving Patient Access to Long-Term Care Pharmacies Act. Lead sponsors — Reps. Beth Van Duyne (R-TX) and Brad Schneider (D-IL) — proposed a targeted fix: a temporary $30 supply fee paid to LTC pharmacies for each prescription dispensed under the new Medicare negotiated prices in 2026, with a slightly higher inflation-adjusted fee in 2027. The bill would also require a federal study on the long-term sustainability of LTC pharmacy reimbursement under Medicare. A companion bill was introduced in the Senate by Sen. James Lankford (R-OK) in November 2025.

Major provider and pharmacy groups endorsed the legislation and urged the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to act. These efforts have not yet yielded a solution.

The Crisis Is Here

January 2026 arrived without a fix in place, and the consequences have unfolded as predicted. “We are witnessing the collapse of America’s long-term care pharmacy infrastructure in real time,” the SCPC has stated. “These aren’t projections — these are decisions LTC pharmacies are making right now because small and mid-size LTC pharmacies cannot survive under the current reimbursement structure.”

Both the House and Senate versions of the bill remain in committee as of spring 2026, with no floor vote scheduled. Advocates are still pushing for passage. However, the bill would now need amending to make any relief retroactive to January 1. Staff layoffs have already begun at pharmacies nationwide, and service reductions are expected to follow.

The painful irony is that the people most harmed by this situation — long-term care facility residents who depend on LTC pharmacies for safe, reliable access to the medications that keep them healthy — are among the Medicare patients who were supposed to be helped by the Inflation Reduction Act.

Lowering drug prices is only part of the equation. Getting that drug safely into the hands of someone who can’t drive to a pharmacy, can’t manage their own medications, and can’t wait until morning is a challenge that requires its own infrastructure. Congress created the rules that require that infrastructure to exist. So far, it has declined to ensure that it can survive.

Created date: 05/26/2026 

Full Article & Source:
Long-Term Care Pharmacy Crisis Hits Nursing Homes