CHESAPEAKE, Va. (WAVY) - A $17.5 million lawsuit has been filed
against a Chesapeake nursing home after staff allegedly tied an elderly
woman to her wheelchair and drugged her.
The lawsuit alleges two
Carrington Place of Chesapeake nurses used bedsheets to tie Annie
Johnson to her wheelchair and confine her in her room overnight in May
2016.
According to the complaint filed in Chesapeake Circuit
Court, the nurses also injected Annie Johnson with Geoden -- an
antipsychotic drug -- to “knock her out."
When
another staff member questioned the nurses about Johnson’s confinement,
a supervisor told them she is “not a [expletive] babysitter,” the
complaint states.
Although staff at Carrington Place are not
allowed to use restraint without a doctor’s consent, that same night
another resident named Alice Mackey was also tied to her wheelchair and
confined to her room, according to the complaint.
Annie Johnson
was a Carrington Place resident who suffered from dementia. She depended
on Carrington Place staff to bathe, feed and clothe her.
The May
2016 incident left bruising across her body, which her grandson
discovered about three days later when he came to visit her at
Carrington Place.
Staff members who reported Annie Johnson’s
confinement to supervisors were fired during the facility's “clandestine
and superficial review” of the incident. The accused nurses kept their
jobs, the complaint states.
A legal representative for Carrington Place could not be reached before publication.
Full Article & Source:
$17.5 million lawsuit filed against Chesapeake nursing home
1 comment:
Go get 'em!
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