Workers found 82-year-old Vincenzina Pontoni submerged in a deep whirlpool bathtub. She had drowned.
Pontoni, a resident of an assisted living facility near Cleveland, wasn’t supposed to be left alone; her care chart stated that facility workers were to stand by while she was bathing “for safety.” But records show she had been unsupervised for at least an hour that day in 2010, with deadly consequences.
State law in Ohio does not require assisted living facilities to alert regulators at the Ohio Department of Health when a resident dies under questionable circumstances, so administrators at Pontoni’s facility never did. While law enforcement did an investigation – ruling the death an accident – the people actually charged with safeguarding seniors in assisted living never so much as visited the facility in response to Pontoni’s death. Indeed, the Department of Health was unaware of how Pontoni died until notified by a reporter investigating assisted living for ProPublica and “Frontline.”
When asked about Pontoni’s death, and whether the Department of Health feared other care issues had been overlooked, Tessie Pollock, a department spokeswoman, said it did not appear that any regulation had been violated by the Cleveland facility. She encouraged the families of residents in the state’s assisted living facilities to be vigilant on behalf of their loved ones.
Ohio’s hands-off approach to regulating assisted living is hardly an aberration.
Over the past two decades, assisted living has undergone a profound transformation. What began as a grassroots movement aimed at creating a humane and innovative alternative to nursing homes has become a multibillion-dollar industry that houses some 750,000 American seniors. Assisted living facilities, at least initially, were meant to provide housing, meals and help to elderly people who could no longer live on their own.
But studies show that increasing numbers of assisted living residents are seriously ill and that many suffer from dementia. The workers entrusted with their care must manage complex medication regimens, safeguard those for whom even walking to the bathroom can be dangerous, and handle people so incapacitated they can be a threat to themselves or others.
Yet an examination by ProPublica and “Frontline” found that, in many states, regulations for assisted living lag far behind this reality.
Full Article and Source:
Elderly at Risk and Haphazardly Protected
See Also:
Life and Death in Assisted Living
I see this all the time. Most ALF are under staffed.
ReplyDeleteI'm so glad to see ProPublica continuing to investigate ALF's.
ReplyDeleteThis article should have the ALF clean up team out in force again. When ProPublica did the last report, the damage control team hit all the blogs --- trying their best to blame the problems at ALF's on families. It didn't go over well at all!
ReplyDeleteThank you ProPublica and NASGA.
ReplyDeleteI didn't realize ProPublica and Frontline are still on ALF's - good for them. I'll be glad to watch this latest. Thanks for posting NASGA.
ReplyDelete