by Whitney Bryan
Michigan Senator Jim Runestad (R-White Lake) has started a petition
calling for nursing homes to allow residents to install cameras in their
rooms.
By signing the Nursing Home Cameras Petition, Runestad
said residents would call on nursing homes, members of the Legislature
and Gov. Gretchen Whitmer to support Senate Bill 77.
According to
Runestad’s, SB 77 is a measure that would establish that a resident of a
nursing home facility or their representative would be permitted to
monitor their private room using an electronic monitoring device under
certain conditions.
“Cameras can act as a deterrent to some of the most
heinous behavior taking place, and they can give peace of mind to family
members worried about the care of their loved ones,” Runestad said. “If
an episode of abuse does happen and is caught on tape, legal video
evidence can be used to bring justice to the abusers.”
Runestad
said his petition was sparked by a video recently made public of a
20-year-old Detroit nursing home resident beating his 75-year-old
roommate on Friday, May 15.
“It shouldn’t take a viral video of abuse or a global
pandemic to convince our leaders that we ought to be protecting our
seniors,” Runestad said. “It’s long past time we do something to protect
nursing home residents from abuse.”
Under SB 77, Runestad said
residents and their families would pay for and oversee the cameras. If a
resident’s living space is a shared one, all roommates would have to
consent to have a camera. Signs would have to be posted in the facility
and the room itself to make it very clear that a camera is present.
Additional provisions would allow the curtaining of cameras for medical
procedures and other sensitive times to protect privacy.
“I urge
everyone to sign this petition to let leaders in Michigan know that
residents should be allowed to install a camera in their nursing home if
they wish,” Runestad said. “Make your voice heard now!
To sign the petition, click here.
Full Article & Source:
Senator’s petition calls on nursing homes to allow cameras in rooms
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