Monday, November 28, 2011

Woman's Death Raises Questions

Don Esco sought skilled nursing care at a Placerville facility for Johnnie, his wife of nearly 61 years, when she was recuperating from a bout with pneumonia. She died 13 days later. Esco sued, alleging that the medical charts lied about Johnnie's treatment.

After nearly 61 years of marriage, Esco's Texas-born dream girl – nicknamed "Sunshine" – died after a 13-day stay at the El Dorado Care Center in Placerville. Recuperating from a bout with pneumonia, Johnnie Esco, 77, was expected to return home with her husband after some rest and skilled-nursing care.

Don Esco buried his wife instead.

The nursing home and its former owner, Horizon West Healthcare Inc. – a Rocklin-based company with a history of licensing violations and run-ins with regulators – would soon be at the center of another legal storm.

Johnnie Esco's death on March 7, 2008, led to a contentious civil lawsuit, investigations by California's Department of Justice and Department of Public Health – and the exhumation of her body from Arlington National Cemetery.

Last week, amid inquiries from The Bee, the state Department of Justice reopened its criminal investigation into Johnnie Esco's treatment at the facility.

The case also raised questions about an aspect of nursing home care that many patients and families take for granted: the integrity of medical records.

"They were just penciling in what they wanted to," said Esco, who obtained his wife's medical records after her death.

He summed up his findings during the lawsuit in one word: "Fabrications."

Esco's suspicions about his wife's care at El Dorado Care Center mushroomed into a broad lawsuit filed in 2009 against the facility and its owner, alleging elder abuse, wrongful death and fraud. An integral aspect of the suit, filed by Esco and his three grown children, accused the facility of falsifying, altering and improperly handling the woman's medical charts as far back as her day of admission.

"It's really one of the most egregious cases I've ever handled," said the family's Sacramento attorney, Lesley Ann Clement.

Full Article, Video, and Source:
Woman's Death Raises Questions

6 comments:

  1. I read the whole story at the source site and it made me sick. Everyone involved in this neglect should be investigated and charges filed appropriately.

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  2. You can't just blame the facility; the fault lies with the state.
    Why aren't they doing a better job?

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  3. In our case the nursing home's records are false intentional misinformation and omissions paint a far different picture than the truth of how our loved one was eliminated before her time.

    I know what I witnessed cruel inhumane treatment of a human being starved to death while our loved one was begging for food and water.

    I wish I could forget what I know but I can't.

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  4. This story should raise everyone's eyebrows. She was recovering from pneumonia and now she's gone?

    What a nightmare for this family.

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  5. Thank you for bringing this important story to the public!

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  6. The fault does also lie with the state, Thelma, you're right. But, where has compassion gone and why don't we care enough about old people nowadays?

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