Nursing Home Doctors are untouched even as facilities are cited
Hurley, McKenna & Mertz of Chicago handles cases against doctors and nursing homes for abuse, neglect, and wrongful deaths that occur in these facilities. The following story discusses one of the most serious recurring problems plaguing nursing home care – the fact that even when facilities are cited, doctors remain fully licensed and undisciplined.
An unfortunate example of such a situation involves Delores Fleming. Her family tried to care for her at home, but eventually Alzheimer’s Disease made it impossible for them to adequately care for her. Reluctantly, they placed her in a nursing home near Decatur, Illinois. Upon entrance, she was deemed “moderately impaired” when she scored a 23 out of 30 on a mental test. However, after a series of crying spells and several instances of wandering away, “her doctor prescribed two antipsychotic drugs, even though she was not psychotic…[and] doubled the dosage of one medication no fewer than four times, putting her above the recommended limit” (Sam Roe, Chicago Tribune, 10/28). Ultimately, a neurologist was called in after her family complained when she scored a zero on a subsequent mental test, and the nursing home was cited for misusing psychotic drugs.
However, as is often the case, the prescribing physician received no citation. Therefore, "There's no downside for the physicians" who order inappropriate psychotropics, said Robert Hedges, a former regulator with the Illinois Department of Public Health who now co-owns five nursing facilities. As a lawyer who specializes in personal injury and medical malpractice cases, and has extensive experience in this area of litigation, I find this story extremely disappointing. It seems unwise and counter productive for citations to be directed only at facilities and not physicians for physicians wrongful prescribing of psychotic medications.