Nearly 200 residents and staff were evacuated from the Voorhees Care and Rehabilitation Center on Sunday, when its air conditioning system failed. |
They
didn’t dial 911 after the air conditioning failed and temperatures
began climbing dangerously high inside a building filled with people in
poor health.
Nobody notified the state Department of Health.
It wasn’t until a visitor finally reported the problem to police, said authorities, that dozens of first responders began arriving to help evacuate more than 100 residents from the Voorhees Care and Rehabilitation Center in Camden County on a steamy Sunday afternoon.
A day after an emergency that saw some
patients moved out of their rooms and taken by ambulance to nearby
nursing homes that could accommodate them — while others were simply
pushed across the street in wheelchairs to a high school serving as
temporary refuge — the situation at the nursing home on Laurel Oak Road
in Voorhees was returning to normal.
But questions remain.
“The
department continues to gather information about the incident,” said a
spokeswoman for the New Jersey Department of Health, who added that the
facility has been “repopulated.”
Nursing
home officials, meanwhile, declined to say why they did not alert
anyone to the crisis, or what went wrong with their air conditioning
system. Inside, though there were portable air conditioner units in
clear view and a worker said many of the lights in the building were off
to try to keep the place cool.
The
nursing home is rated at the bottom for its quality of care, ranked
“much below average,” according to the most recent report by the U.S.
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. That report in April 2018
concluded the facility had failed to maintain a clean and sanitary
environment that was in good repair.
Voorhees
Capt. Carmen Del Palazzo said his department did not get a call from
the nursing home, and first learned there was a problem at about 11:15
a.m. on Sunday from a visitor as the heat wave
that had gripped the state for days sent temperatures outside to triple
digits. More than four hours later, he said about 100 residents and 20
staff were being walked, wheeled and bused to Eastern Regional High
School across the street and placed in a cafeteria. Others were taken
away by ambulance.
Jim Arpino, a captain with the Voorhees
Fire Department, said about 75 police officers, firefighters and
emergency workers from Camden, Burlington and Gloucester counties worked
in shifts during the evacuation.
One
resident was taken from the cafeteria to a hospital because of a medical
emergency, Arpino said, and another on hospice died in the nursing
home, but he said neither situation was heat-related, and that the death
occurred in a room where the air conditioning was working.
The
nursing center sits on a quiet, tree-lined street, next to a facility
for disabled children and not far from a bustling mall.
The
evacuees for the most part were hosted for about four hours at the
adjacent high school. Harold Melleby, Jr., superintendent of the Eastern
Camden County Regional School District, said the cafeteria was
well-cooled and near bathrooms, and he said the school had plenty of
space to house even more people.
Melleby
was not sure if the school had a formal agreement with the nursing home
to house residents, but said he and the staff who showed up Sunday were
happy to help.
“We wanted to be a good neighbor,” he said.
According to state health officials, the department was never notified
by the facility about the deteriorating conditions, and was not involved
in the evacuation.
Nursing home facilities in New Jersey are
required to establish a written heat emergency action plan which
mandates the procedures to be followed if the indoor air temperature is
82 degrees or higher for a continuous period of four hours or longer,
officials said.
Part of those procedures include the notification of the department, they noted.
It is not known how hot the temperatures got inside on Sunday.
Palazzo
believed one of the facility’s three rooftop compressors had failed.
The police spokesman could recall at least one other problem with the
facility’s air conditioning in the past, but he said that had not
prompted an evacuation.
On Monday, the
nursing home — a five-story brick building surrounded by lush trees and
well-manicured lawns — was quiet. An employee watered plants in the back
while workers trickled in and out of the front entrance, walking over
white tile and past upholstered furniture that appeared older, but
clean.
Officials at Voorhees Care and
Rehabilitation would not respond to questions. A woman at the nursing
home’s front desk said the facility’s administrator, Bentzion Friedman,
had no comment. Another later asked a reporter to leave.
Full Article & Source:
Nobody from nursing home called for help as dozens of seniors suffered in triple-digit temperatures
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