by Danielle Brown
A resident’s family suing a nursing home and hospice facility for
medical malpractice and wrongful death can use records from previous
state investigations, including survey citations, a court of appeals has
ruled.
The Louisiana Court of Appeals ruled
Wednesday to make the investigation records admissible after the Naomi
Heights Nursing Home & Rehabilitation Center and Guardian Hospice
Care in Alexandria, LA, appealed a previous decision. Bloomberg Law first reported on the ruling.
The facilities argued the records from investigations conducted by
the Louisiana Department of Health and Hospitals were inadmissible as
“hearsay evidence.”
The court disagreed, noting an exemption is an “investigation of a
particular complaint, case or incident, including an investigation into
the facts and circumstances on which the present proceeding is based.”
The Louisiana DHH conducted unannounced investigations of both the
nursing home and hospice facility in 2013, and cited it for various
deficiencies, including failure to treat pressure ulcers properly.
The lawsuit was filed by Yvonne Sawyers and Patricia Hall on behalf
of their mother, who died in November 2013. They allege the providers’
lack of medical care led to their mother contacting a stage four ulcer
and sepsis.
Full Article & Source:
Previous survey citations allowed in medical malpractice nursing home case, court rules
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