Nursing Home Abuse Lawyers

Norfolk, Newport News, and Roanoke, Virginia

 

Nursing Home Health: A Diagnosis

Nursing Home Neglect in Virginia
Safety, care violations widespread in region

 

Staffing and money are critical, but too often fall short

 

Every day frail, helpless, elderly Virginians suffer substandard care and neglect in nursing homes. Wounds from falls, sores from poor hygiene, inattention, improper medication and diet, and verbal abuse leave patients physically ill and emotionally scarred. Sometimes, the result is premature death.

 

When Dorothy Moss, and 85-year-old Alzheimer's patient, entered her first nursing home in November 1999, she was walking, talking and feeding herself. A year later she lay dying in a pool of blood.

 

Moss was moved by family members in and out of three Hampton Roads nursing homes over 12 months. In the first one, she fell out of her wheelchair and suffered a gash in her head. She became emaciated and was hospitalized with severe malnutrition, dehydration and pneumonia, medical records show.

 

After six months in a second nursing home, she wound up in the hospital again, this time curled up in a fetal position and in critical condition with multiple infected bedsores, which occur when a bedridden patient isn't repositioned often enough.

 

Her plight ended fatally in November 2000 in a

 

third home where, medical records show, she began bleeding at the site where a feeding tube entered her body. She died in bed, awaiting a blood transfusion that never came.

 

"She pretty much lay there and bled to death," said Dottie Merinar of Portsmouth, Moss' daughter. Merinar's complaint against the facility where her mother died was substantiated by state health-care regulators.

 

Nursing-home operators say their patients receive good care from conscientious professionals and that stories like Moss' are rare.

 

However, government reports, lawsuits and a review of state nursing-home inspection records by The Virginian-Pilot reveal that dozens of nursing homes throughout the region and the state have incurred stacks of safety and health-care violations.

 

A legislative study in 2000 found that more than half of Virginia's 275 nursing homes failed to meet federal quality standards. The problems were most severe in eastern Virginia, where three-quarters of the homes were found to be out of compliance.

 

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CONSIDERATIONS IN CHOOSING A NURSING HOME

 

These newsletters/articles are offered only for general informational and educational purposes. They are not offered as and do not constitute legal advice or legal opinions. Although we intend to keep this information current, we do not promise or guarantee that the information is correct, complete or up-to-date. You should not act or rely upon the information in these newsletters/articles without seeking the advise of an attorney.

 

Contact Kalfus & Nachman at 800-361-0430 in Norfolk, Hampton, Newport News, Portsmouth, Roanoke, and Virginia Beach, Virginia for more information on nursing home abuse newsletters. We offer free legal consultations or save time with our online Contact Form.

 

 

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