Shana Dorsey first caught
sight of the purplish wound on her father's lower back as he lay in a
suburban Chicago hospital bed a few weeks before his death.
Her
father, Willie Jackson, had grimaced as nursing aides turned his frail
body, exposing the deep skin ulcer, also known as a pressure sore or
bedsore.
"That was truly the first time I saw how much pain my dad was in," Dorsey said.
The
staff at Lakeview Rehabilitation and Nursing Center, she said, never
told her the seriousness of the pressure sore, which led to sepsis, a
severe infection that can quickly turn deadly if not cared for properly.
While a resident of Lakeview and another area nursing home, Jackson
required several trips to hospitals for intravenous antibiotics and
other sepsis care, including painful surgeries to cut away dead skin
around the wound, court records show.
Dorsey
is suing the nursing center for negligence and wrongful death in caring
for her dad, who died at age 85 in March 2014. Citing medical privacy
laws, Lakeview administrator Nichole Lockett declined to comment on
Jackson's care. In a court filing, the nursing home denied wrongdoing.
The
case, pending in Cook County Circuit Court, is one of thousands across
the country that allege enfeebled nursing home patients endured
stressful, sometimes painful, hospital treatments for sepsis that many
of the lawsuits claim never should have happened.
Year
after year, nursing homes around the country have failed to prevent
bedsores and other infections that can lead to sepsis, an investigation
by Kaiser Health News and the Chicago Tribune has found.
No one tracks sepsis cases closely enough to know how many times these infections turn fatal.
However, a
federal report has found that care related to sepsis was the most common
reason given for transfers of nursing home residents to hospitals and
noted that such cases ended in death "much more often" than
hospitalizations for other conditions.
A special analysis conducted for KHN by Definitive Healthcare, a private health care data firm, also suggests that the toll — human and financial — from such cases is huge.
Examining
data related to nursing home residents who were transferred to
hospitals and later died, the firm found that 25,000 a year suffered
from sepsis, among other conditions. Their treatment costs Medicare more
than $2 billion annually, according to Medicare billings from 2012
through 2016 analyzed by Definitive Healthcare.
In Illinois,
about 6,000 nursing home residents a year who were hospitalized had
sepsis, and 1 in 5 didn't survive, according to Definitive's analysis.
"This is an enormous public health problem for the United States," said Dr. Steven Simpson, a professor of medicine at the University of Kansas and a sepsis expert. "People don't go to a nursing home so they can get sepsis and die. That is what is happening a lot."
The
costs of all that treatment are enormous. Court records show that
Willie Jackson's hospital stays toward the end of his life cost Medicare
more than $414,000. Medicare pays Illinois hospitals more than $100
million a year for treatment of nursing home residents for sepsis,
mostly from Chicago-area facilities, according to the Medicare claims
analysis.
Sepsis
is a bloodstream infection that can develop in bedridden patients with
pneumonia, urinary tract infections and other conditions, such as
pressure sores. Mindful of the dangers, patient safety groups consider
late-stage pressure sores to be a "never" event because they largely can
be prevented by turning immobile people every two hours and by taking
other precautions. Federal regulations also require nursing homes to
adopt strict infection-control standards to minimize harm.
Shana Dorsey remembers her father as a quiet but friendly man. He worked as a uniformed bank security guard and picked up extra cash fixing neighbors' cars in an empty lot adjacent to his West Side apartment building. He was a stickler for detail, who relished teaching his granddaughter the state capitals and was always ready to lend a hand to help his daughter, who now works for a Chicago property management firm.
Yet the
failures that can produce sepsis persist and are widespread in America's
nursing homes, according to data on state inspections kept by the
federal Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. Many of the
lawsuits allege that bedsores and other common infections have caused
serious harm or death. The outcome of these cases is not clear, because
most are settled and the terms kept confidential.
Cook County,
where the private legal community is known to take an aggressive
approach to nursing homes, has more of these suits than any other metro
area in the U.S., KHN and the Tribune found by reviewing court data.
State
inspectors also cite thousands of homes nationally for shortcomings
that have the potential to cause harm. Inspections data kept by CMS show
that since 2015 94 percent of homes operating in Illinois have had at
least one citation for conditions that increase the risk of infection.
These citations include care related to bedsores, catheters, feeding
tubes and the home's overall infection-control program.
"Little
infections turn to big infections and kill people in nursing homes,"
said William Dean, a Miami lawyer with more than two decades of
experience suing nursing homes on behalf of patients and their families.
Much
of the blame, regulators and patient advocates say, lies in poor
staffing levels. Too few nurses or medical aides raises the risks of a
range of safety problems, from falls to bedsores and infections that may
progress to sepsis or an even more serious condition, septic shock,
which causes blood pressure to plummet and organs to shut down.
Staffing
levels for nurses and aides in Illinois nursing homes are among the
lowest in the country. In the six-county Chicago area, 78 percent of the
facilities' staffing levels fall below the national average, according
to government data analyzed by KHN.
Matt
Hartman, executive director of the Illinois Health Care Association,
which represents more than 500 nursing homes, acknowledged low staffing
is a problem that diminishes the quality of nursing care.
Hartman
blamed the state's Medicaid payment rates for nursing homes — about
$151 a day per patient on average — which he said is lower than most
other states. Medicaid makes up about 70 percent of the revenue at many
homes, he said.
Last
October, CC Care LLC, an Illinois nursing home group that specializes
in treating mentally ill patients on Medicaid, filed for bankruptcy,
arguing that the state's "financial troubles have been disastrous for
all nursing homes."
In
a July court filing, CC Care creditors' committee argued that the
company couldn't stay afloat relying on Illinois Medicaid payments,
which it called "slow, erratic and significantly less than what we are
due."
Pat
Comstock, executive director of the Health Care Council of Illinois,
said nursing homes she represents "are operating in an increasingly
difficult environment in Illinois, yet they continue to prioritize
delivering the best care possible to residents in a safe and secure
setting."
A Festering Complaint
Shana Dorsey remembers her father as a quiet but friendly man. He worked as a uniformed bank security guard and picked up extra cash fixing neighbors' cars in an empty lot adjacent to his West Side apartment building. He was a stickler for detail, who relished teaching his granddaughter the state capitals and was always ready to lend a hand to help his daughter, who now works for a Chicago property management firm.
But
age and declining health caught up with the Army veteran, who by his
early 80s began to exhibit signs of dementia and moved into an assisted
living apartment.
Dorsey knew
her dad needed more specialized care when she found him sitting in his
favorite peach recliner in his apartment, unable to get up and
incontinent.
He
required more intense medical and personal care as his kidney disease
worsened and he became more confused, medical records show. In his last
18 months of life, he cycled in and out of hospitals eight times for
treatment of septic bedsores and other infections, according to court
records.
The
Chicago law firm representing Dorsey, Levin & Perconti, provided
KHN and the Tribune with medical records and additional court filings
that cover Jackson's care.
Poor infection control ranks among the most common citations in nursing homes. Since 2015, inspectors have cited 72 percent of homes nationally for not having or following an infection-control program. In Illinois, that figure stands at 88 percent of homes.
Jackson had
two pressure sores in late November 2012 when he was first admitted to
Lakeview nursing center from the Jesse Brown VA Medical Center in
Chicago, according to lawyers for his daughter.
These
wounds healed, but in late September 2013, Jackson spiked a fever and
had an infected sore in his lower back that exposed the bone, causing
what Dorsey's lawyers called "significant pain."
The
nursing home transferred Jackson to Presence St. Joseph Hospital in
Chicago, where surgeons cut away the dead skin and administered
antibiotics. At that time, the sore was as wide as a grapefruit and had
"copious purulent drainage, foul smell and bleeding," Dorsey's lawyers
argue. Tests confirmed sepsis, and the wound had grown so deep that it
infected the sacral bone in his back, a condition known as
osteomyelitis, the lawsuit said.
In
November 2013, Dorsey moved her father to another nursing home. He
required three more hospital visits before Dorsey made the difficult
decision to place Jackson in hospice care. He died March 14, 2014, from
"failure to thrive," according to a death certificate.
In
her suit, Dorsey, 39, argues that Lakeview nursing staff knew Jackson
was at "high risk" for bedsores because of his declining health. Yet the
home failed to take steps to prevent the injuries, such as turning and
repositioning him every two hours, according to the suit. That didn't
happen about 140 times in August 2013 alone, Dorsey's lawyers said.
"My
father was like my best friend. Most people go to their mom to talk and
tell all their secrets, and for me it was my dad," Dorsey said in a
November 2015 deposition.
While
Lakeview declined to discuss Jackson's treatment, it has denied
negligence and argued in court filings that its actions were not to
blame for Jackson's death. Lockett, the home's administrator, said the
facility "strictly follows" all regulations to minimize the effects of
skin breakdowns that can occur naturally with age.
"We
are grateful for the daily opportunity to enhance the lives of seniors
and other chronically ill populations in our community," Lockett said in
a statement.
Infection Control
Poor infection control ranks among the most common citations in nursing homes. Since 2015, inspectors have cited 72 percent of homes nationally for not having or following an infection-control program. In Illinois, that figure stands at 88 percent of homes.
Illinois
falls below national norms for risks of pressure sores or failure to
treat them properly in nursing homes. Inspectors have cited 37 percent
of the nation's nursing homes for this deficiency, compared with 60
percent in Illinois, according to CMS records. Only three states were
cited more frequently.
Inspectors
in November 2016 cited Alden Town Manor Rehabilitation and Health Care
Center in Cicero, Ill., for neglect due to its care of an unnamed
83-year-old man with pressure ulcer sores that went untreated. Gangrene
had set in by the time the staff sent him to the hospital, where
surgeons ended up amputating his right leg above the knee, according to
the inspectors' report and citation. Alden Town Manor had no comment.
Dean, the
Miami lawyer, said that nursing home staffs often miss early signs of
infection, which can start with fever and elevated heart rate, altered
mental status or not eating. When those symptoms occur, nurses should
call a doctor and arrange to transfer the patient to a hospital, but
that process often takes too long, he said.
"They don't become septic on the ambulance ride over to the hospital," Dean said.
There
is little agreement over how much staff should be required in nursing
homes. Federal regulations simply mandate that a registered nurse must
be on duty eight hours per day, every day. In 2001, a federal government
study recommended a daily minimum of 4.1 hours of total nursing time
per resident, which includes registered nurses, licensed practical
nurses and certified nursing assistants, often referred to as aides.
That never became an industry standard or federal regulation, however.
Most states
set requirements lower and face industry resistance to raising the bar. A
California law requiring 3.5 hours per resident as of this July 1 is
drawing intense criticism from the industry, for instance.
In addition, staffing can fluctuate, particularly over the weekends. A recent KHN investigation found that on some days, nursing home aides could be in charge of twice as many residents as normal.
At
a minimum, Illinois requires 2.5 hours of direct care daily for
residents. Yet federal nursing home payroll data show that at least 1 in
4 Chicago-area nursing home residents live in facilities that aren't
consistently providing that much care, KHN found.
Nationally,
each aide is responsible for 10 residents on average; in the six-county
Chicago area, the average is 13 residents per aide.
Federal
officials have linked inadequate staffing to bedsores and other
injuries, such as falls. If left unattended, even a small ulcer or sore
can become septic, and once that happens, a patient's life is in
imminent danger.
In
October 2014, Milwaukee-based Extendicare denied wrongdoing but paid
$38 million to settle a federal False Claims Act lawsuit that accused it
of not having enough staff on hand in 33 nursing homes in eight states,
including Indiana, and failing to take steps to prevent bedsores or
falls.
In
other cases, federal officials have alleged that some nursing homes
overmedicate residents — which can result in injuries such as falls from
beds or wheelchairs and bedsores — rather than staff up to care for
them properly.
In May 2015, owners of two nursing homes in Watsonville, California,
agreed to pay $3.8 million to settle a whistleblower lawsuit alleging
the homes persistently drugged patients, contributing to infections and
pressure sores.
The
suit alleged that an 86-year-old man who could barely move after
receiving a shot of an anti-psychotic medication lost his appetite and
spent most of the day in bed, "was not turned or repositioned and
developed additional pressure ulcers." He ran a 102-degree fever, but
the staff failed to notify his doctor for three days, according to the
suit.
Hospital
doctors later diagnosed the man with sepsis and an infected pressure
ulcer. The home did not admit wrongdoing and had no comment.
Personal
injury lawyers and medical experts say that poor infection control
often sends nursing home residents to hospitals for emergency treatment —
and that the stress can hasten death.
Elderly
people often "don't have the ability to bounce back from an infection,"
said Dr. Karin Molander, a California emergency room physician and board
member of the Sepsis Alliance advocacy group.
That
odyssey of multiple, stressful trips to the hospital is a common thread
in negligence and wrongful death lawsuits involving sepsis or bedsores.
KHN identified more than 8,000 suits filed nationwide from January 2010
to March of this year that allege injuries from failing to prevent or
treat pressure sores and other serious infections.
Molander said serious bedsores indicate "someone is being ignored for an extended time period."
"When we see patients like that we file [patient neglect] complaints with adult protective services," she said.
Some of these cases led to million-dollar jury verdicts. In 2017, a Kentucky
jury awarded $1.1 million to the family of a woman who suffered from
bedsores and sepsis in a nursing home. In a second case last year, a
jury awarded $1.8 million to a widow who alleged a Utah nursing home
failed to turn her husband often enough to prevent bedsores, which led
to his death.
In September 2013, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services said it was working to reduce avoidable transfers from nursing homes to hospitals. CMS had previously called these trips "expensive, disruptive and disorienting for frail elders and people with disabilities."
Lawyers filed
more than 1,400 of the cases from January 2010 to March of this year in
Cook County Circuit Court, which tops all metro areas across the
country in the KHN sample.
Nursing
homes complain that garish billboards to solicit clients are a fixture
in Chicago, where many attorney websites also boast of recent
million-dollar verdicts from bedsore cases alone.
"We
see an incredible amount of lawsuits out there," said Hartman, of the
Illinois nursing home association. "We feel we have a target on our
backs."
Trial
lawyers counter that nursing homes often try to duck responsibility for
poor care by creating complex corporate structures to limit their
liability. Yet Hartman derided these suits as "cash cows" for law firms
that can rack up six-figure legal fees as cases drag on. The nursing
home industry supports tort reforms that would compensate injured
persons but also bring a quicker resolution of claims, he said.
"That is something that needs to be fixed in Illinois," Hartman said.
Avoidable Hospital Transfers
In September 2013, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services said it was working to reduce avoidable transfers from nursing homes to hospitals. CMS had previously called these trips "expensive, disruptive and disorienting for frail elders and people with disabilities."
The
plans came in the wake of a critical 2013 Department of Health and
Human Services audit that found Medicare had paid about $14 billion in
2011 for these transfers. Care related to sepsis cost Medicare more than
the next three costliest conditions combined, according to the audit.
The
auditors have not checked in to see if Medicare has since reduced those
costs and have no plans to do so, a spokesman for the HHS Office of
Inspector General said.
However,
Definitive Healthcare's analysis of billing data, modeled after the HHS
audit, shows little change between 2012 and 2016, both in terms of
deaths and costs.
Wendy
Meltzer, executive director of Illinois Citizens for Better Care, said
that hospital trips caused by treatment for sepsis can be "emotionally
devastating" for confused elderly patients.
"It's
not a choice anybody makes. It's horrible for people with dementia,"
Meltzer said. "Some never recover from that. It's a very real phenomenon
and it's cruel."
University of Maryland master's student Chris Cioffi contributed to this report.
This
story was jointly produced by Kaiser Health News and the Chicago
Tribune by reporters based in Washington, D.C., and Chicago. Fred
Schulte is a senior correspondent for KHN and Elizabeth Lucas is data
editor. Joe Mahr is a Tribune reporter.
Full Article & Source:
Sepsis Infections Take Fatal Toll on Seniors
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