Showing posts with label elderly patients. Show all posts
Showing posts with label elderly patients. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 9, 2022

Las Vegas Assisted Living Employee Caught Stealing From Elderly Patients

By Dane Enerio

Representation. An elderly person holding a cane. Alexas_Fotos/Pixabay

KEY POINTS

  • A woman, 41, stole the personal information of residents of an assisted living facility in Las Vegas
  • The woman, who carried out the theft while working at the facility, used the information for personal purchases
  • She was arrested Sunday and booked on multiple charges, including the exploitation of a vulnerable person

A 41-year-old woman has been accused of stealing from the elderly residents of a Las Vegas, Nevada, assisted living facility that she worked at, according to authorities.

Tami Friend was booked on three counts of theft over $5,000, exploiting an older or vulnerable person and using another person's identification following her arrest Sunday, newspaper the Las Vegas Review-Journal reported, citing a press release from the city's Metropolitan Police Department (MPD).

While working at an undisclosed Las Vegas assisted living facility, Friend stole the personal information of residents and used the data for personal purchases, police claimed.

Further details on Friend's case were not immediately available.

Friend, who has since been booked into the Clark County Detention Center, may have more victims, according to authorities.

Police have urged anyone with information about Friend to reach the MPD's Financial Crimes Section at 702-828-3483.

Tipsters wishing to remain anonymous can contact Crime Stoppers by phone at 702-385-5555 or on the internet via their website.

In a similar story, a couple in the United Kingdom posed as nurses to steal morphine and painkillers from the houses of terminally ill patients.

Ruth Lambert and Jessica Silvester, two female paramedics from the southeastern English county of Kent, were sentenced to jail for five years each after they pleaded guilty to charges of conspiring to burgle and conspiring to commit theft.

The two stole the medication prescribed to patients receiving end-of-life care while posing as nurses.

They also collected medication from three houses by convincing residents that they were from the health department collecting medicines after the deaths of patients.

Authorities arrested Lambert and Silvester in August last year after police received multiple complaints of burglaries, and they were identified through surveillance cameras.

Investigators found medications that had the names of other people, nurses' uniforms and a computer stolen from the health department at the couple's residence in Gap Road, Margate.

Lambert and Silvester carried out 29 burglaries in and around Kent, stealing medication such as morphine and painkillers to feed their drug addiction.

"This was an extraordinarily callous and uncaring form of exploitation of the most vulnerable people often when they were terminally ill or dying or in some cases when they had actually died," a judge said during the duo's sentencing.

Full Article & Source:
Las Vegas Assisted Living Employee Caught Stealing From Elderly Patients

Wednesday, October 14, 2020

‘Sadistic’ Nurse Who ‘Enjoyed Inflicting Pain’ On Elderly Patients Killed 3 With Antipsychotic Drug


By Aly Vander Hayden

In the spring of 1990, 82-year-old Alphonse Silva underwent treatment for throat cancer, and he was subsequently admitted to the Rosedale Manor Nursing Home in St. Petersburg, Florida as part of his recovery process. 

“[W]e hoped that Rosedale Manor would enable him to eventually recover and come home,” his son, Art Silva, told “License to Kill,” airing Saturdays at 6/5c on Oxygen

Not long after Alphonse settled in, however, he passed away, and his family believed he had succumbed to the cancer. It was not until 10 weeks later that an investigation was opened into a Rosedale Manor nurse, proving Alphonse’s death was anything but natural. 

On July 31, 1990, Helen Gasky-Brummer, who specialized in elder abuse at the Florida Department of Child and Family Services, received a call from the abuse hotline about a suspicious nursing home death. Muriel Watts, a 79-year-old comatose patient at Rosedale Manor, had passed away, but multiple nurse’s aides on duty at the time reported that they did not believe Watts had died from natural causes. 

When Gasky-Brummer arrived at Rosedale Manor, she spoke with the licensed practical nurse in charge, who was convinced that some type of mishap had led to Watts’ death, piquing Gasky-Brummer's suspicion that foul play could have been involved. 

“Nurses see death every day. Why is she concerned about this one patient?” Gasky-Brummer told producers. 

The night of Watts’ death, the LPN in charge of the wing was Brian Rosenfeld, and witnesses reported an alarming interaction between him and the comatose patient. 

“Muriel Watts had a fever. Brian Rosenfeld put some Tylenol down the tube, but then two aides had observed him pouring some brown liquid, a huge amount, down her feeding tube,” former Tampa Bay Times reporter Stephen Nohlgren told "License to Kill.” 

When an aide asked Rosenfeld why he was administering the mystery liquid, he instructed her not to question his methods, and she later heard Rosenfeld say that Watts “would be gone soon.” 

Within hours, Watts was dead, and Rosenfeld insisted on cleaning her body before the undertaker arrived, a task that was normally carried out by nurse’s aides. Even stranger, he washed Watts’ entire body with mouth wash and refused to let anyone else help or touch her remains. 

In order to have Watts’ body examined for evidence and halt her scheduled cremation, Gasky-Brummer contacted local authorities to report her suspicions, and the Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office took on the case. 

After speaking with Gasky-Brummer and reading her investigative report, Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office Deputy Chuck Vaughn placed a hold on Watts’ remains, and an autopsy was performed by the medical examiner’s office.  

Vaughn then made his way to Rosedale Manor, where he learned that Rosenfeld had been fired not just for the Watts incident, but also for recurring behavioral issues. 

“The nursing assistants complained that if they had done something that irritated Rosenfeld, he would over-administer laxatives to patients as a means of getting back at the nursing assistants,” Vaughn told producers. 

Nursing aides also described Rosenfeld as “sadistic” and said he had come “to enjoy inflicting pain on other people,” Nohlgren said. 

Digging further into his background, investigators learned Rosenfeld had worked in more than 16 nursing homes over a 10-year span, and former colleagues relayed incidents in which Rosenfeld would physically abuse his patients. Some recalled that he bent patients’ fingers back until they screamed in pain, and other co-workers detailed times when Rosenfeld threw water on a patient and shoved a banana down another’s throat. 

Any time nursing assistants challenged Rosenfeld and his behavior, he would simply pull rank. 

No formal complaints were ever filed against Rosenfeld, however, and there was no physical evidence or proof to validate the witnesses’ claims. So, he went on to work in multiple nursing homes without consequence. 

“It was hard to tell whether he was fired or whether he left on his own, but it could be what would lead to him jumping from nursing home to nursing home,” Gasky-Brummer told producers. 

Brian Rosenfeld Ltk 210 2

While Watts’ autopsy revealed no external signs of injury and no definitive cause of death, investigators sent blood and gastric content samples to the lab for further analysis. Vaughn then met with Rosenfeld at his apartment to discuss the various complaints against him, which he claimed were nothing more than malicious accusations. 

After the toxicology report came back, it revealed that Watts’ blood had toxic levels of acetaminophen and five times the normal dose of a drug called Melleril, which is an antipsychotic medication normally prescribed to patients with schizophrenia or mood disorders. 

As Watts was comatose, there was no reason for her to have Melleril in her system, according to “License to Kill.” 

Authorities brought Rosenfeld in for an interview on Aug. 23, 1990, and he told investigators that due to him being stressed and overworked, he may have accidentally administered the wrong medication to his patients. When questioned about Watts, Rosenfeld admitted he possibly could have given her the Melleril in error. 

“He said, ‘I have occasionally mixed up medications for patients,’ and he even went so far as to say it was about 50 percent of the time,” Larry Bedore, chief investigator for the medical examiner’s office, told producers. 

Rosenfeld was then arrested for Watts’ murder and held without bail, and law enforcement began to expand its investigation, learning that a total of 201 patients had died during Rosenfeld’s shifts, according to “License to Kill.” 

“That gave us a list of potential bodies that needed to be investigated for evidence of malfeasance on Brian Rosenfeld’s part,” Assistant Medical Examiner Jackie Martino told producers. 

Investigators narrowed down the investigation to three cases — including Alphonse and Hazel DeRemer, an 81-year-old Alzheimer’s patient who died three years earlier — in which the bodies could be exhumed and autopsied for evidence.  

As they awaited the autopsy results, David Greenway, a former cellmate of Rosenfeld’s, contacted authorities and told them that Rosenfield had admitted to injecting a female comatose patient with Melleril because he felt sorry for her.  

He claimed Rosenfeld said he had done this on numerous occasions and had claimed approximately 23 victims across various nursing homes.  

It was ultimately revealed that Alphonse and DeRemer had lethal amounts of Melleril in their systems, and Rosenfeld’s charges were upgraded to three counts of first-degree murder.  

The case never went to trial, however, as Rosenfeld agreed to plead guilty in order to avoid the death penalty. He was given three life sentences without the possibility of parole.  

To learn more about the case, watch “License to Kill” on Oxygen.com

 
Full Article & Source:

Saturday, April 29, 2017

More than one-fourth of SNF residents colonized with drug-resistant bacteria, analysis shows

More than 25% of skilled nursing facility residents have multidrug-resistant bacteria lurking within them, including E. coli, a new research review has found.

Researchers with the Columbia University School of Nursing analyzed 12 studies and found the 2,720 nursing home residents whose data was included in the review had drug-resistant bacteria prevalence rates ranging from 11.2% to 59.1%. The study found a 27% average colonization rate, with E. coli accounting for the largest proportion of colonizations.

The review's results, published in the May issue of the American Journal of Infection Control, also identified factors such as advanced age, gender, comorbidities, increased interaction with healthcare workers and delayed initiation of antibiotics to raise residents' colonization risk.

“This study underscores the importance of having strong infection prevention programs in all nursing homes and long-term care facilities,” said Linda Greene, RN, MPS, CIC, FAPIC, president of the Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology. “Understanding the dynamics and cause of MDR-GNB transmission is crucial to identifying effective infection control strategies specific to these settings.”

The research teams encouraged providers to identify which residents are most at risk for multidrug-resistant gram-negative bacteria, and allow infection preventionists to tailor efforts specifically for those residents.

“The results of our study suggest that there is much more to be done with regard to infection prevention within nursing homes, and that increased measures must be taken with elderly patients in regard to MDR-GNB colonization,” the researchers wrote.

Full Article & Source:
More than one-fourth of SNF residents colonized with drug-resistant bacteria, analysis shows