Editor’s
note: This article is the third in a three-part series examining how
and why New York’s nursing homes too often fail to keep their residents
safe. Read the first part here and the second part here.
Nestled among stately
colonial houses and hemmed in by rambling stone walls, the Hebrew Home
at Riverdale sits on 32 acres of well-manicured land in the tony Bronx
neighborhood of North Riverdale. The nonprofit nursing home holds a
coveted 5-star rating from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services and wins perennial mentions in U.S. News and World Report’s
list of best nursing homes.
But this idyllic campus is the subject of worrying
reports from former residents who say they were neglected and suffered
under Hebrew Home doctors and nurses who failed to provide adequate
care. City & State examined dozens of lawsuits brought against the
nursing home as well as other reports of neglect from former residents,
their family members and lawyers.
Since 2010, over two dozen lawsuits were filed
against Hebrew Home alleging medical malpractice or neglect that led to
serious injuries or wrongful death – a red flag that may call into
question its 5-star ratings.
Hebrew Home declined repeated interview requests from City & State.
When asked to explain the allegations of neglect, the
nursing home responded in a statement: “We cannot and will not comment
on litigation in which the Hebrew Home is a party.” The statement also
noted that Hebrew Home has a resident council where complaints are
discussed and that administrators do “respond directly to any and all
resident and family concerns that warrant attention at that level.”
“The Hebrew Home at Riverdale is proud of its near
century history of providing the highest quality of care and compassion
to countless older adults and their families,” the statement read.
City & State identified and reviewed 26 lawsuits
against Hebrew Home. Most of them are ongoing. Six have been settled –
most for undisclosed sums. Just one case was dismissed based on the
evidence.
City & State did find that two other large
nursing homes in the Bronx had similarly high numbers of neglect
lawsuits, but resident advocates and industry representatives differ on
what that might indicate. Industry representatives see elder abuse
attorneys attacking an easy target in a litigation-friendly borough,
while resident advocates see a sign of a systemic problem with neglect.
Industry experts, advocates, and lawyers interviewed
by City & State said Hebrew Home may still be one of the best
nursing homes in the state – but considering the quality of nursing home
care in New York, bad things can happen even at the best facility.
Ultimately, they said, the numerous reports of neglect and abuse at
Hebrew Home, one of New York’s top-rated nursing homes, is an indication
of failed state oversight.
“What we're seeing is that even in a supposedly good
nursing home the care is generally not very good,” said Richard Mollot,
executive director of The Long Term Care Community Coalition, a leading
advocacy group for nursing home residents. “I think it's very
significant.”
What’s more, inconsistencies between reports of
neglect and official CMS star ratings, as seen at Hebrew Home, undermine
the credibility of the nursing home ratings system, advocates argued.
Living in a nursing home “that is purportedly a
5-star facility doesn't mean that you are necessarily safe,” Mollot
said. "It's possible to have significant problems and still be highly
rated, because of the problems in oversight and monitoring.”
Reports of abuse and neglect in New York nursing homes have spiked over the last few years, as understaffed regulators struggle to function effectively. As City & State previously reported,
the quality of New York nursing home care ranks among the worst in the
nation, with the state attorney general’s office indicating that the
state needs more manpower to police the problem.
A recent state comptroller report noted
short-staffing at the state Department of Health as a serious issue that
led to delays of up to 6 years in fining nursing homes for violations
after investigators identified problems. The state Health Department,
which acts as the primary regulator of nursing homes, said the problems
were being addressed.
But other research suggests that health officials often fail to identify violations even when they are looking for them.
“In recent years we've seen a significant decrease in
the state holding nursing homes accountable,” Mollot said. “I would say
we have widespread failure to meet or exceed the minimum standards.”
The state Health Department has laws and enforcement
methods at its disposal that allow it to crack down on nursing homes
that are abusing or neglecting their residents. But advocates complain
that the department has not been taking full advantage of these tools.
LTCCC issued a report last year noting that the state Health Department rarely cites nursing homesfor
pressure ulcers. At the same time, the report found that nearly 9
percent of nursing home residents have a pressure ulcer. The sores are a
commonly used measure of neglect in nursing homes because they are
easily preventable with proper care. In other words, the wounds are an
observable indicator of neglect.
"We have 9,000 people in New York nursing homes that have pressure ulcers," Mollot said. “That is insane.”
The report also found that the state Health
Department rarely cites nursing homes for staffing shortages even though
New York is recognized as having low staffing rates. On average, the
department issued just 13 citations for insufficient nursing staff each
year to the over 600 nursing homes in the state, according to the
report.
In 2005, LTCCC reported that federal inspectors
identified more than four times the number of health violations than New
York state inspectors did in the same nursing homes.
Still, the state Health Department stressed they have
a thorough process to investigate complaints. When it finds
deficiencies, nursing homes are given citations and fines.
“DOH is committed to protecting the health and safety
of New York’s nursing home residents,” an agency spokesperson said.
“Whether or not there is abuse or neglect, any time a facility violates a
regulation it must submit a plan of correction that is acceptable to
the Department and correct the deficient practice. All complaints and
incidents received about nursing homes are reviewed by the Department
through the Centralized Complaint Intake Unit with appropriate action
taken. In cases where the Department determines a nursing home violates
regulation, the Department will issue a citation to the nursing home.”
For advocates, all the evidence points to a broken
regulatory system that leaves nursing homes largely unaccountable and
elderly residents vulnerable to neglect.
“Essentially, the federal and state agencies were
given a powerful tool to carry out their respective mandates to hold
providers accountable for protecting residents, which they chose to
ignore in favor of activities that were much more amenable to the
(nursing home) industry,” said Mollot.
"It is infuriating and heart-breaking," he said.
The state Department of Health
is the principal regulatory oversight agency in New York, but the
federally-mandated Long Term Care Ombudsman program also plays a role in
monitoring abuse and neglect in nursing homes.
Although they have no direct authority over nursing
homes, ombudsmen are charged with investigating complaints and seeking
to resolve them by assisting residents in reporting complaints to the
Health Department, the attorney general’s office, or the police.
Since funding is sparse and the workforce is almost entirely volunteer, there’s only so much they can do.
In New York City, the regional ombudsman program
oversees roughly half of the state’s residents in nursing homes – around
50,000 people in 174 nursing homes. If the program were fully funded,
there would be 24 paid staff members – instead, they have six. They
manage an unpaid volunteer corps of 90 ombudsmen who work an average of 4
to 6 hours a week. But more than half of the city’s nursing homes do
not have an ombudsman assigned to check in on them.
In recent years, formal reports from the ombudsmen
dropped precipitously across the state because the New York ombudsmen
instituted new reporting methods that were far more labor-intensive for
the volunteers. A policy change required them to fill out several pages
of paperwork, instead of filing a single-page complaint.
“The number of cases or complaints in New York state
absolutely plummeted almost to zero – and it wasn't because there
weren't complaints,” said Richard Danford, the ombudsman coordinator for
New York City. “It was because the methodology they were using was
problematic and the volunteer ombudsmen in the field stopped reporting.”
As a result, Danford said, the figures that New
York’s Long Term Care Ombudsman submits to the federal ombudsman office
are inaccurate.
“I would really caution you – anybody – against using
this number as a measure of really anything reliable,” Danford said. “I
hate to tell you that.”
There are plans to revise the reporting practices and improve the data in the future, Danford said.
With a state regulator that sparsely cites nursing
homes and is slow to fine them, and an ombudsman program that is poorly
funded, understaffed, and has largely stopped reporting complaints,
nursing home residents and their families told City & State they
feel they have no other recourse but to file a lawsuit.
Now, even that avenue may be shutting down.
Many nursing homes include forced arbitration clauses
in their admission agreements, in which residents waive their right to a
trial when they sign the paperwork admitting them to the facility. Any
future dispute must then be mediated by a private contractor. A New York Times investigation last year found that arbitrators tend to favor repeat clients, like nursing homes.
An appellate court decision last summerin
the case Friedman v. The Hebrew Home for the Aged at Riverdale denied
the Hebrew Home resident a civil trial, because an admission agreement
with a forced arbitration clause was signed. Even though
New York health law forbids such arbitration clauses, the judge echoed a
U.S. Supreme Court ruling that the Federal Arbitration Act supersedes
state law. Lawyers are appealing the decision.
Richard Abend, who represents the resident in that
case, said that if the decision is upheld, “it will result in the denial
of justice to nursing home residents that have been the victims of
negligence” and will remove “a powerful incentive” for nursing homes to
provide quality nursing care.
The view of the New York City skyline from Hebrew Home's campus. (Frank G. Runyeon)
Both in court filings
and interviews, former residents and their families said chronic
understaffing at Hebrew Home was a key problem that led to neglect. They
described inattentive or absentee nursing assistants and nurses or
doctors who acted too late to identify and treat basic medical
conditions that ultimately led to unnecessary suffering, injury or
death.
“Ironic, isn't it, that they seem to lavish more care
on the trees than on the humans inside?” Samantha Shubert posted
online. She told City & State that her mother, Sherlee, then 84
years old, was neglected during a stay at the Hebrew Home’s sub-acute
rehabilitation unit in July and August of 2013.
Sherlee Shubert developed pressure ulcers – open
wounds resulting from a lack of movement that state regulations say
should never happen – while under the nursing home’s care, according to
Sherlee and Samantha, her daughter. Shortly after moving in, her mother
called her at night weeping in pain, saying the nursing staff were
ignoring her cries for help, Shubert said. Although the Hebrew Home is
among the most expensive nursing homes in the country – with beds
costing between $459 and $872 a day, or up to $318,280 a year, according
to data provided to Caregiverlist by Hebrew Home – the family paid an
outside nursing agency to come into the nursing home to care for her
mother at night. The agency that provided the care for the Shuberts and
other families described the practiceas a common way families cope with inadequate care at understaffed nursing homes.
Rebecca Rosenzweig, owner of TrueCare Home Health
Care, the nursing agency that cared for Sherlee Shubert said there's
more elder abuse by way of neglect in nursing homes. “You can get all
sorts of infections because somebody wasn't paying attention,” she said.
Hebrew Home acknowledged that residents hire outside
nursing agencies, but stressed that “such personnel are prohibited by
law from providing any nursing care, which can only be done by Hebrew
Home staff.”
For nearly a year after Sherlee Shubert left Hebrew
Home, she remained bedridden because of the pressure sores which doctors
feared may require amputation. In at least two other instances reviewed
by City & State, a patient did have to have an amputation.
Other reports are even grimmer.
Among the 26 lawsuits reviewed by City & State,
13 plaintiffs alleged Hebrew Home residents died a wrongful death as the
result of negligence or medical malpractice.
One court filing describes Concepcion Elias, a
102-year-old woman in “stable condition” who entered Hebrew Home to take
advantage of its well-reputed physical therapy services. But after she
was placed in a room with no heat in late winter of 2013, she fell ill
with a respiratory condition that doctors failed to treat. Her grandson
Carlos Elias tried to bring in a space heater, but the staff wouldn’t
allow it. At nurses’ request, he brought in blankets and sweaters for
his grandmother to insulate her from the large drafty window next to her
hospital bed.
But in less than three weeks, Concepcion Elias
developed a “temperature” and was pronounced dead of “natural causes,”
according to nursing home records and her death certificate.
“They could have said, ‘Listen, take her home,’”
Elias said. “I’m not going to live in peace for the rest of my life.
It’s my fault – I trusted them.”
Carlos Elias believes the nursing staff and doctors
covered up what really happened to his grandmother. After her death, no
one at Hebrew Home would speak with him, he said, and the state Health
Department failed to discipline the nursing home. Now, he is bringing a
lawsuit against the nursing home.
“I am not looking for money,” he said. “I’m looking for justice.”
Although Hebrew Home officials would not comment on
pending litigation, they appear to disagree with Carlos Elias on the
purpose of neglect lawsuits against nursing homes, according to a copy
of presentation slides co-authored by senior officials at Hebrew Home
and their law firm, Wilson Elser Moskowitz Edelman & Dicker.
In the May 2013 presentation, titled “Good Practices
to Avoid Litigation in Nursing Homes,” an early slide asks: “What’s it
all about?” The answer: “MONEY!! NOT JUSTICE.”
Jim Clyne, CEO of LeadingAge, whose organization
represents nonprofit New York nursing homes and health care providers,
holds a similarly dim view of former residents or their families suing
nursing homes.
Plaintiffs lawyers in these cases are capitalizing on aggrieved New Yorkers, he said.
“They are the ambulance chasers of the nursing home
world,” Clyne said. “For whatever reason – they would say for good
reasons, we would say probably not,” there’s a whole segment of lawyers
who “actively solicit business for nursing home residents,” he said.
Clyne said that Bronx County, where Hebrew Home is
located, is known to be a good place to find sympathetic jurors for
lawsuits. And with potentially thousands of residents cycling through
larger nursing homes like Hebrew Home, which has 555 CMS-certified beds,
the chances for litigation are increased.
“Listen, no one is justifying if there really is a
wrongful death or an injury. That's a bad mistake,” Clyne said, adding
that facilities should be held accountable. But, he said, nursing homes
are vulnerable to lawsuits because they work with the sick and elderly.
As a result, Clyne said, “Everybody knows there's going to be
litigation.” According to his logic, these factors help explain why
there have been two dozen lawsuits against Hebrew Home since 2010.
But research indicates the number of claims brought
against Hebrew Home may be unusually high compared to the national
average. Although City & State could not find any comprehensive
figures on lawsuits filed against nursing homes in New York, a 2011
study, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, analyzing the
relationship between quality of care and negligence litigation in
nursing homes, found that between 1998 and 2010 U.S. nursing homes generally received about one claim every two years.
By contrast, Hebrew Home averaged more than four
lawsuits every year – or about 8 times the national average for a single
nursing home. But even if adjusted for the relatively large size of
Hebrew Home, the nursing home still had 43 percent more negligence
claims against it than the national average – at least. In computing the
national average, the 2011 study included claims settled in
arbitration. City & State was unable to include any arbitration
claims in its tally of Hebrew Home cases. The nursing home did not
provide that information on request.
While researchers who conducted the study said the
two dozen lawsuits against Hebrew Home seemed high, they cautioned that
there are a variety of factors that may be influencing the number of
lawsuits, including the litigation climate, as industry representatives
noted.
However, the sheer quantity of claims begs serious questions, researchers said.
“It raises red flags,” said David Stevenson,
associate professor of health policy at Vanderbilt University and a
co-author on the study. "Part of what I'd want to know is: How is this a
5-star facility, if it has this many allegations of abuse and neglect?
And this many litigation claims against it?"
In particular, Stevenson said, it calls into question
the nursing home’s 5-star health inspection ratings from the state
Health Department. “That’s a little puzzling to me,” he said, noting
later that he was “baffled” that a nursing home with that volume of
lawsuits against it had not been cited for any deficiencies from those
incidents.
Two other Bronx nursing homes, Workmen’s Circle
Multicare Center and Kings Harbor Multicare Center, that also have
5-star overall CMS ratings and are comparable in size to Hebrew Home
(but charge 30-40 percent less than their top-ranked neighbor) appeared
to have similarly high numbers of negligence lawsuits filed against
them.
In a statement, Workmen’s Circle touted its 5-star
rating and explained that “lawsuits are an inherent part of this
industry.” The administrator for Kings Harbor, Alex Stern, said that
both the large size of his nursing home and the high turnover of its
sub-acute rehabilitation unit help explain the numerous lawsuits.
However, he said he takes the lawsuits very seriously. “Even one lawsuit
is too many,” Stern said.
CMS data also shows that Hebrew Home only has a
2-star rating for nursing staffing, widely considered the most important
indicator of quality care. In fact, the nursing home provided 18
percent fewer nursing hours per resident than the national average, or 3
hours and 24 minutes of nursing care per resident per day. This is
based on information the nursing home itself submits to regulators.
“I think that's pretty disturbing that the facility
itself is saying that they only have a two-star rating for staffing,”
said Deborah Truhowsky, president of the board for LTCCC, the advocacy
group for nursing home residents.
A Hebrew Home spokesperson insisted that the nursing
home “exceeds government measures,” contending that the CMS rating
excluded some staff. The ratings are widely seen as imperfect, but are
considered the standard way to compare nursing homes.
“Many Hebrew Home staff members who play critical
roles in the quality of life of our residents are not included in
government staffing measures,” the spokesperson said. On-site
physicians, therapists, “barbers and beauticians, wait staff, wellness
center and aquatic therapy personnel, and the dozens of nursing students
who are employed by or rotate in the Hebrew Home, are not included in
government staffing measures, yet provide significant additional care to
our residents.”
Nevertheless, advocates said that it is the direct nursing care that matters most.
“Things like bed sores, falls, and malnutrition
potentially can happen as a result of inadequacies in daily caregivers.
So not enough (nursing staff) to turn and position people or change
(diapers on) people, then that is what's most relevant,” Truhowsky said.
“If there's not enough staff for direct care, then residents are going
to suffer."
On a gusty hilltop
overlooking the Hudson River one afternoon this spring, a public
relations officer toured a City & State reporter around the Hebrew
Home at Riverdale.
Inside the main complex, she pointed out the Derfner
Judaica Museum, an art studio, fish tanks, a friendly therapy dog, and
walked through an impressive physical therapy space with a heated pool,
ending at the Weinberg Center for Elder Abuse Prevention – touted as
“the nation’s first comprehensive shelter for victims of elder abuse.”
For all outward appearances, the residents were lucky
to live in what many consider to be New York’s most elite nursing home.
But what was most notable about the tour were the stories not told –
stories of mistreatment suffered inside the nursing home’s walls, and
even stories of those who wandered away unnoticed.
According to eyewitness accounts, police reports, and
Health Department records, it appears that since 2010, several
residents have left Hebrew Home undetected, which is called elopement.
(According to the state Department of Health, elopement occurs when “a
resident leaves the Nursing Home building undetected or fails to return
from a (preauthorized) pass.”) This can be a serious violation of
nursing home regulations, carrying high risks – after 24 hours,
research shows that one in four eloped residents will be found dead.
On Aug. 7, 2010, a 75-year-old female resident at
Hebrew Home “left the residence by walking out of the main gate,”
according to New York City Police Department records. The woman was not
found until the next day, state Health Department officials said. The
agency cited Hebrew Home for a violation, but stopped short of issuing a
fine. Health officials explained that “a fine was not imposed in this
instance because, based on the Department’s investigation, the incident
was isolated, the resident was not injured, and the facility had
policies and procedures in place to prevent elopements.”
But there have been at least two other cases of nursing home residents who went missing from Hebrew Home since then.
On July 4, 2015, a 71-year-old Hebrew Home resident
with dementia named Sandra Dawson, wandered out Hebrew Home’s main gate
alone, according to her and her husband, Tom
Dawson. Tom was shocked to find her in their Manhattan apartment that
afternoon. Because of her dementia diagnosis, Tom said, Hebrew Home had
placed Sandra in the Alzheimer’s unit, but then decided to move her into
a less secure area. Taking the route she described, she
appears to have walked at least two miles along Bronx roads before
taking the subway into Manhattan.
After her return to Hebrew Home that night, Tom never
reported the incident to management for fear of losing a coveted spot
at the facility. That evening, however, he did post about his experience
on Yelp, the user review website, to warn others about the facility’s
lack of security.
In another incident early this year, on a frigid Feb.
7, New York City Police officials say a 53-year-old Hebrew Home
resident was reported missing from the nursing home’s campus – police
note only that he was found.
When asked about elopements from the facility, Hebrew
Home issued a statement that “there have been no cases of elopement
from the Hebrew Home for at least the last five years.”
After City & State provided details of these
events, Hebrew Home acknowledged the 2010 elopement but disputed the
other incidents in a statement. The nursing home also said that it seeks
to balance having a “secure environment” with residents’ right to
“leave the campus if they wish” and to “move freely and safely.”
But Hebrew Home refused to elaborate on the specific incidents beyond
its statement, which noted it could not legally discuss details
regarding the individuals. “However,” it read, “the facts as you have
described them are patently incorrect. We reiterate that there have been
no elopements from the Hebrew Home in the last five years, which
includes these cases.”
Tom and Sandra Dawson disagree, of course – Sandra told Tom she “escaped” more than once.
After the incident, Tom looked into other nursing homes. But for now, he cares for Sandra himself.
Correction: An earlier version of this post incorrectly said that the patient in the Friedman v. Hebrew Home case no longer lives at the nursing home. In fact, she remains a Hebrew Home resident.
Full Article & Source:
Reports of neglect at top nursing home point to failures in state oversight
5 comments:
I have heard numerous complaints about the Hebrew Home. Thank you for shining a light on it.
All families should be acutely aware that just because a facility looks clean or maybe even doesn't smell, doesn't mean the patients are being taken care of properly. Go in after hours -- midnight. That's when you'll see what's really going on.
The fees are outrageous and the care does not fit the mugging of these helpless frail residents....... somebody in the government needs to WAKE UP.......and go looking into branches of Hebrew Homes and grab their books they are totally out of control raping the people where are the laws to protect the residents? Oh I forgot the lobbyists and special interest groups are the money bags who buy legislation for their financial best interests.
Applause & standing ovation to the reporter who is digging up the muck to get to the truth....thank you!!! FRANK G. RUNYEON
Having a 5 star rating does not mean anything if the Hebrew Home is killing vulnerable people who cannot even defend themselves, manipulating records, not giving residents enough heat in their rooms on purpose to the point that they will get sick, denying them their medicines, ignoring the most vulnerable residents when they call for help, not helping them change their clothing, not helping them to the bathroom, not answering the bed alarms, not explaining the facial bruises to the families or ignoring the bruises totally, refusing to explain to families exactly what happened, giving families the run-around after their loved one's death by telling them to go somewhere else, telling residents that if they leave they will have them arrested by their " security ", making nasty comments to grieving family members about their loved one's death that they died " quick and that is how they should all die ", etc. They are not 5 star health care workers and the fact that there are so many complaints filed in the Bronx courts definitely do not reflect any 5 star rating. The Hebrew Home’s heated pool, gymnasium, large halls, and " pristine " lawns (a masquerade) are only meant to distract people from the murders that are going on inside and that fail to be prosecuted by the state, by all those others who brag that they protect our seniors and the department of health because of our corrupt political system and some people’s common and selfish perception that once a person reaches old age they are not worth our attention. Where is our love for our parents and grandparents going? Why are researchers on aging in the United States interested suddenly in knowing why Costa Rica has an exclusive neighborhood where the citizens are living past their 100th birthday? They don’t have to travel far to find out the reason because it is under their noses. They don’t have greedy and expensive nursing homes that will defraud insurance companies or their families for their money and their politicians listen to their complaints. The society and legal system respect the elderly population in those countries in the same way that the system protects children in the United States. Based on my personal experience with the murder, death and loss of my grandmother this is not the case in the United States. The life of an elderly citizen is not respected in the same way as the life of a child. A life is a life and just because someone is 100 years old it does not give anyone the right to do harm to that person and get away with it. This is what the Hebrew Home did to my beloved grandmother and mother.
The Hebrew Home took the life of my grandmother without any regret and hesitation, and they tortured both, my grandmother and mother, with lack of medical attention, neglect, threats and manipulation. They placed my beloved grandmother for instance in a cold room with no heat and they kept both, mother and daughter separate in different buildings for no reason. They let my grandmother do her necessities in her chair for instance. I had to change her cloths and clean her because I always saw her sitting on her own stool and urine. They rarely came to help me change her. They let her get chest congested and get a pneumonia which their own radiologist detected on an X ray and for which he recommended to them follow up care which they ignored. We found her with unexplained bruises on her face which their nursing staff refused to explain and which they called a “skin discoloration “. They always refused to give us an explanation as to what happened despite our phone calls and letters. They kept telling my mother that if she tried to leave (they were both wheel chair bound) they would have her arrested. They manipulated many things in their medical records to their advantage and their social worker was always coming in between to discourage us from ever finding out what happened. After the complaint was filed in court the Hebrew Home displaced these workers, none of them into other facilities. They were mostly nurses, one social worker and CNA’s in an attempt to protect them so that they could not be served any court papers. This is The Hebrew Home which claims they care about our elderly and which they also claim they are against elderly abuse with 26 complaints in the Bronx courts and still operating? Anyone else on the street who is charged with 26 counts of murder would be called a serial killer. The facts speak for themselves. They are insensitive animals hiding behind a license. They are murderers. These places are enjoying legal immunity in this country because the state is giving it to them.
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