There is something very wrong with a society that allows its
weakest and most vulnerable members to be preyed upon. But that is what
is happening in many nursing homes across America. Male and female
residents, many of them with dementia or other debilitating diseases,
have been abused.
A CNN investigation found that more than 1,000 facilities have been
cited for "mishandling or failing to prevent alleged cases of sexual
assault at their facilities."
Some of the cases are
sickening, and inexplicable: An 83-year-old woman in Minnesota being
ravaged by Alzheimer's disease was raped by a nurse's aide in the middle
of the night. Her family later learned that the man had been suspended
three other times for suspected assaults. In California, an 88-year-old
woman was assaulted during the night and weeks later was diagnosed with a
sexually transmitted disease.
There is no way to
know how rampant the abuse problem is because many of the victims have
advanced stages of dementia and cannot identify their attackers or
provide details about the assaults. Often the incidents are swept under
the rug. In other cases, in order to prevent bad publicity, the assault
is never reported.
But federal data document more
than 16,000 cases of sexual abuse in long-term care facilities since
2000. That is an alarming number. Long-term care facilities need to
abide by the Nursing Home Reform Act, which requires facilities
participating in Medicare and Medicaid to meet quality of care
standards. That is not happening universally now.
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Another Viewpoint: Abuse of the vulnerable is sickening
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