For 22 days, caregivers at a Kirkland adult-family home guarded a secret.
An elderly woman at Houghton Lakeview suffered from pressure sores that had burrowed to the bone. No one called her family. No one alerted a doctor.
The state of Washington harbored a secret, too.
Investigators had cited Houghton Lakeview 33 times for inadequate care and substandard conditions. Two caregivers were convicted felons, barred from such work. Two others had forged nursing credentials. The public was never warned — nor were the residents in the home.
By the time the woman was rushed to the emergency room, it was too late. Jean Rudolph, 87, a retired nursing educator who had Alzheimer's disease, died in 2008 from untreated pressure sores.
The state Department of Social and Health Services (DSHS) and the owner's insurance company agreed to a $900,000 settlement this week with the Rudolph family.
This rare settlement reveals a state regulatory system torn between dual roles: booster of the industry as a way to control costs, as well as enforcer of its failings. With rising numbers of low-income seniors in need of long-term care, Washington and dozens of states are banking on these residential facilities as alternatives to more costly nursing homes.
The risk to the public, says attorney Tony Shapiro, who represented the Rudolph family, occurs when state agencies like DSHS form a "bunker mentality" and excuse violators to preserve existing adult homes.
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$900,000 for Death at Kirkland Adult-Family Home
Disgusting! Don't send me to one of those places!
ReplyDeleteI'm so glad to see this. Get in their pockets - it's the only way to make them shape up.
ReplyDeleteWow - but aftr the appeal and probably years of delay, think this will ever get paid?
ReplyDeleteThere is NEVER an excuse for bedsores. Don't listen if facilities tell you bedsores are commmon. They are, but not because they're not preventable.
ReplyDeleteThe amount of the fine at least gets their attention.
ReplyDeleteGood!
ReplyDelete