Elder abuse comes in a variety of forms. The abuse we hear about most frequently is physical abuse, which includes assault, battery, and sexual offenses, and financial abuse, which is usually a matter of fraud or undue influence upon a senior citizen. Both physical and financial abuse are very serous…
Articles Posted in Elder Abuse
Peer-on-Peer Abuse in Nursing Homes More Common than Believed
Nursing home abuse and neglect is not always perpetrated by staff members. New research from Cornell University suggests that aggression and violence between residents may be more prevalent than abuse or mistreatment from nursing home employees. According to the study, peer-on-peer abuse is nursing home is a problem that has…
Southern California Nursing Home Citation Watch
This list contains the issuance of citations to Southern California nursing facilities by the California Department of Public Health over the last six months. All the citations listed are issued for reasons related to patient care. For verification of the citation, please contact the local department office or Walton Law…
Nursing Home Care Fails To Improve Despite Funding Increases
The quality of care provided by California nursing homes has declined by almost every measure since the implementation of a new Medi-Cal rate system that increased funding the nursing facilities according to a new study by the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF). Meanwhile, nursing home complaints and the issuance…
Residential Care Facility Inspections at Mercy of California Budget Cuts
Budget cuts proposed by Governor Schwarzenegger could cripple California’s oversight of Residential Care Facilities for the Elderly. Further damage to the already struggling oversight program could put thousands of RCFE residents at risk. According the California Advocates for Nursing Home Reform (CANHR), the proposed cuts come at a time when…
Elder Abuse: “Never Events” – Things that Should Never Happen in a Nursing Home
In an effort to save some taxpayer money and improve patient care at the same time, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) has made a list of health conditions that are preventable and should never occur in the nursing home or hospital setting. According to the National Quality…
Many U.S. Nursing Homes Practice “Off-Label Use” of Antipsychotic Drugs
Medicaid spends more money on antipsychotic drugs than any other prescription drug. Physicians are prescribing these powerful drugs in record numbers to nursing home residents in order to control their behavior, not for the treatment of psychotic illness. It is reported that nearly 30% of the total nursing home population…
U.S. Nursing Homes: More Profits, Less Nursing Care
Nursing home owners have claimed for years that they are barely getting by, and the lawsuits against them for negligent care are going to drive them out of business, leaving no place to put seniors. We reject this argument as a time-honored trick by tortfeasors to become the victims after…
Pressure Ulcer “Stages” Updated
The National Pressure Advisory Panel updated its definition of the four “stages” used to diagnose pressure ulcers or decubitus ulcers (often referred to as bed sores). It also added two new stages on deep-tissue injury and ulcers that cannot be staged. The updated stages of pressure ulcers were released at…
Medicare To Stop Paying For Treatment Of Pressure Ulcers
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services announced last month that, it will no longer reimburse hospitals for treating eight “reasonably preventable” conditions as of October 2008 the Wall Street Journal reports. Pressure ulcers are among the most prevalent, costly and dangerous on the list. In addition to interfering with…