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AUGUSTA, Ga. (WRDW/WAGT) - Families
remain cut off from loved ones in nursing homes as COVID-19 continues to
ravage long-term care facilities.
Before
the pandemic, families relied on the ombudsman to investigate
allegations of abuse or neglect, but even they are now cut off from
nursing home residents.
But even before COVID-19, lengthy investigations could frustrate family members seeking answers.
We found understaffed agencies, coupled with COVID-19, could make the delays even worse.
Time is of the essence when a loved one is in a possible neglectful
situation, but we found it took nearly 100 days for a regional ombudsman
and the South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control
to investigate a family’s concerns of possible neglect and that’s before
the pandemic hit.
But let’s focus on more on our story -- mainly the story of Margaret and Theron Garvin.
You
see, life is like a camera -- focus on what’s important, capture the
good times, and if things don’t work out, just take another shot.
There
are no more shots left for 95-year-old Theron and 82-year-old Margaret.
The loving couple moved into Anchor Health and Rehabilitation Center
after Theron’s second stroke and Margaret was diagnosed with dementia.
They died less than a year later.
We combed through notes written by Kristy Garvin taken when she visited her in-laws.
“Nobody should see their loved one soiled or you have to constantly advocate because she has no clothes on,” Kristy said.
Kristy
started sending what she claims she was seeing to the regional
ombudsman in August. Ombudsmen are state advocates for nursing home
patients. Meanwhile, another visit, another note on Aug. 19, Kristy says
she finds Theron shivering in the hallway with a small blanket. Staff
check on him. He has a 104 degree temperature. Kristy alleges the
director of nursing later tells her she was not informed by her staff.
Theron is admitted to the hospital.
“It’s
like ripping your heart out,” Kristy said. “This man that you have
known all these years to be strong and help others to help you and love
you and care for you to be at his weakness moments.”
Theron went into cardiac arrest and died
11 days later. Kristy asks the ombudsman to open an investigation before
he passed away. A month later she asks the same ombudsman to
investigate the care of her mother in law.
Days and then weeks went by. Kristy asks for an update.
The
ombudsman is working on it. She tells Kristy she visited her
mother-in-law twice for a total of 5 hours, but didn’t see anything of
concern. Kristy asks if she notified DHEC, the state agency which
oversees nursing homes. The ombudsman replies, “I have not forwarded any
complaints specific to the Garvins at this time.”
Kristy filed a complaint herself with DHEC.
According to documents obtained by the
I-Team, DHEC found two violations during the investigation -- both of
which are class one violations, meaning the violations present “an
imminent danger -- death or serious harm could result therefrom.”
Theron
and Margaret both passed away before DHEC closed its investigation.
Margaret died of heart failure. DHEC did not suggest that the violations
it found in any respect caused either Theron or Margaret’s deaths.
A
spokesperson for Anchor Health and rehabilitation sent us this: “We
work closely with and communicate at least weekly with DHEC and the
South Carolina Long-Term Care ombudsman, and that helps explain why we
have a 4-star quality rating from the federal government, exceed state
and national averages in improved mobility for patients and discharges
for short-term patients and why we are so proud of the services and
skilled care we provide residents.”
The
I-Team found before the pandemic, the ombudsman investigated more than
9,600 complaints in South Carolina and more than 5,000 in Georgia. But
that was then, and this is now. The virus has shut out ombudsman from
going inside of facilities since March. The federal government also
suspended all non-emergency inspections during the pandemic.
Brian Lee is the executive director of Families for Better Care, a nursing home advocacy group.
“Annual
inspections aren’t occurring at facilities anymore,” Lee said. “There
are no ombudsman going in there. There is no accountability. No one
knows what’s going on in nursing homes right now except the nursing
homes.”
DHEC inspectors in South
Carolina and Department of Community Health inspectors in Georgia are
still mandated to investigate allegations of abuse and neglect in
nursing homes during the pandemic. However, resources are tight. Georgia
is currently short 23 inspectors and only has 33 inspectors to cover
every nursing home in the state -- all while still responding to
outbreaks of COVID-19 in long-term care facilities.
“You try to communicate,” Kristy said. “You advocate like they say.”
Although it took nearly a hundred days to
close out the investigation, the Garvins at least had an advocate and
an inspector able to go into the facility before the pandemic.
Now with inspections on pause and communication cut off, officials say you are “spinning your wheels.”
More families could be left feeling like their concerns are getting nowhere, too.
Full Article & Source:
I-TEAM: Investigators cut off from nursing homes as pandemic rages
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