Under
Pennsylvania regulations, the worst citation that a nursing home can
get is called "immediate jeopardy." It's a type of violation that
typically means the home has endangered residents.
Last year, a PennLive investigation found that the Department of Health appeared to be rarely issuing "immediate jeopardy" citations or penalizing homes for serious problems. Over the past year that appears to have changed: The department has issued significantly more of those citations and, consequently, it's also penalizing homes more frequently.
The following list includes all 36 immediate jeopardy citations issued between July 1, 2016 to June 30, 2017 in chronological order.
Last year, a PennLive investigation found that the Department of Health appeared to be rarely issuing "immediate jeopardy" citations or penalizing homes for serious problems. Over the past year that appears to have changed: The department has issued significantly more of those citations and, consequently, it's also penalizing homes more frequently.
The following list includes all 36 immediate jeopardy citations issued between July 1, 2016 to June 30, 2017 in chronological order.
Huntingdon Park Rehab Center
City: Huntingdon
Survey Date: 7/11/16
Incident: Inspectors found the home shut down its air-conditioning system for repairs, but its temporary cooling solution was inadequate. Residents were overheated on a hot summer day, including an obese resident who had difficulty breathing due to the heat.
State Penalty: Provisional license 1 and $4,500 fine
Survey Date: 7/11/16
Incident: Inspectors found the home shut down its air-conditioning system for repairs, but its temporary cooling solution was inadequate. Residents were overheated on a hot summer day, including an obese resident who had difficulty breathing due to the heat.
State Penalty: Provisional license 1 and $4,500 fine
Falling Spring Nursing and Rehabilitation Center
City: Chambersburg
Survey Date: 7/15/16
Incident: Inspectors found the home failed to keep temperatures in one nursing unit at a safe, air-conditioned temperature. Rooms ranged in temperature from 79 to 85 degrees on a hot summer day.
State Penalty: $2,250 fine
Survey Date: 7/15/16
Incident: Inspectors found the home failed to keep temperatures in one nursing unit at a safe, air-conditioned temperature. Rooms ranged in temperature from 79 to 85 degrees on a hot summer day.
State Penalty: $2,250 fine
Willow Terrace
City: Philadelphia
Survey Date: 7/24/16
Incident: Inspectors found the home failed to keep its building at a safe, air-conditioned temperature. Rooms ranged from 82 degrees to 89 degrees. Inspectors also found that staff members were failing to monitor and aid residents who were uncomfortable or potentially endangered.
State Penalty: $3,750 fine
Survey Date: 7/24/16
Incident: Inspectors found the home failed to keep its building at a safe, air-conditioned temperature. Rooms ranged from 82 degrees to 89 degrees. Inspectors also found that staff members were failing to monitor and aid residents who were uncomfortable or potentially endangered.
State Penalty: $3,750 fine
Elkins Crest Health and Rehabilitation Center
City: Elkins Park
Survey Date: 7/28/16
Incident: Inspectors found the home failed to keep the home at a safe, air-conditioned temperature. Some rooms were as hot as 90 degrees.
State Penalty: $3,250 fine
Survey Date: 7/28/16
Incident: Inspectors found the home failed to keep the home at a safe, air-conditioned temperature. Some rooms were as hot as 90 degrees.
State Penalty: $3,250 fine
Full Article & Source:
Deaths, injuries and nude photos - a list of 36 serious Pa. nursing home violations
1 comment:
Reformist have been trying to fix nursing homes for years. Big money is protecting them.
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