State regulators ended inquiries into a patient’s death and alleged abuse at the Florida Institute for Neurologic Rehabilitation last year over doubts about their legal authority.
The 196-bed institute, a closely-held company known as FINR, is one of the largest brain-injury centers in the U.S. and draws patients from around the country.
The Florida Department of Health brought an end to inquiries over the February 2011 death of Melinda Jakobowski, a mentally ill Connecticut woman sent to FINR, after other state regulators had already concluded there were care lapses in her case, according to inter-agency e-mails reviewed by Bloomberg News.
The e-mails also showed a top Department of Health official believed FINR was operating outside its brain-injury license in treating Jakobowski and others who didn’t have such injuries at its facility in Wauchula, 50 miles southeast of Tampa. The department has taken no action against FINR over the alleged unlicensed care.
The state’s decision not to further scrutinize the brain- injury company preceded a second death in Wauchula last year and charges of criminal abuse of FINR residents by employees.
Patients’ families or state agencies have alleged abuse or care failures in five FINR residents’ deaths since 1998, as reported by Bloomberg News last week.
FINR denied the allegations in three of those cases, which led to lawsuits. One resulted in a $5 million verdict against the company and the other two ended in settlements. FINR has declined to comment on the Jakobowski case or the later death, which have not been the subject of any lawsuits.
‘Proactive Approach’
Officials from three Florida agencies will meet tomorrow to discuss cases at FINR, said Victor Johnson, a state Department of Health Official who oversees its brain-injury program.
“All of us have to change the way we have done or responded to these issues in past,” Johnson said. “We want to go with a more proactive approach to respond to these issues with one state response.”
Wayne J. Miller, a lawyer for FINR, said “there is probably no health care provider in the state that has as much oversight.” He said the facility is subject to inspections and regularly visited by police, state agencies, disabled-protection groups, guardians, family members and others. When a problem is identified at FINR it is “immediately evaluated and corrected,” Miller said.
Jakobowski, 24, died five months after the state of Connecticut sent her to FINR. She was found unresponsive in her bed with her hair wrapped around her neck and died later at a Tampa hospital in what was ruled a cardiac arrhythmia.
E-mails Released
Florida released internal e-mails in that case and others to Bloomberg News under an open records law request. Although her name was redacted, Florida officials confirmed Jakobowski is the person referenced in the e-mails.
Three Florida agencies that deal with FINR -- the Department of Children and Families, the Agency for Health Care Administration and the Department of Health -- passed their findings in the case around internally, the e-mails show. None of the agencies believed it had authority to take regulatory action.
An AHCA investigation found that FINR failed to maintain proper supervision of Jakobowski and that she was left alone despite a history of trying to hurt herself. It said in an e- mail that it had no authority to regulate patient treatment -- and sent a request for further investigation to the Department of Health.
Reimbursement Sought
William Reineking, the administrator for the brain-injury program in that department, responded in April 2011 that he might not investigate the case unless his office was reimbursed for its costs.
The case provided evidence “again” that “FINR is treating people not covered by the license,” Reineking said in another e-mail to AHCA the following month.
Although Jakobowski was suffering from mental illness, she was not brain-injured. The health department says it only has the authority to regulate the care of FINR patients under a “transitional living facility” license covering those suffering from traumatic-brain or spinal-cord injuries.
Both the health department and AHCA, which licenses health- care facilities, declined to say why the state has permitted FINR to treat patients at its brain-injury center when they don’t have brain injuries.
Regulatory Gap
Other cases of alleged abuse involving patients who were severely mentally ill or autistic, but not brain-injured, also have fallen into the regulatory gap, the e-mails show.
Full Article and Source:
Florida Ended Death Probe at Private Brain Rehab Center
See Also:
Police Probe Death of State Psychiatric Patient in Florida
7 comments:
These people must be held accountable and shut down.
This makes me sick. Imagine what would have happened if one of them had taken the time to find out whose authority the probe was really under?
Bloomberg News is big media. I would have thought the Miami Herald's series on ALF's would force reform in FL, but it didn't. Amazing. Bloomberg is even tougher than the Herald. Let's see if FL can escape this one.
Whatever happened to parens patriae - the authority of state to protect people who can't act on their own behalf?
I'll bet those who are responsible for the inferior care, negligence and worse have their undies in a knot! Good! Accountability is demanded. Consequences for actions and inactions is a must.
Send a complaint in to almost any authority and the form letter comes back that the issue isn't in their purview.
We end up going around and around and this article is a perfect example of why this needs to stop - people are being abused and some are even dying.
Good report and that caused me to see the original article pointing out the abuse at FINR. We need more reports like this one to start getting a demand for reform.
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