Nursing Home Blamed For Patient Death

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BY MICHAEL L. OWENS
and DANA WACHTER
BRISTOL HERALD COURIER/11 CONNECTS
BRISTOL, Tenn. – Ninety-eight-year-old Anne Brightwell died in a hospice bed June 16, family members said, after months of screaming over a fractured left femur that would not heal.
Her upper leg bone shattered Feb. 6, when a hammock sling, used by Cambridge House nursing home staff to hoist her from a bed to a wheelchair, snapped. A medical examiner listed the broken femur as the cause of death on Brightwell’s death certificate.
Daughter Ruth Countiss said the fall could have been prevented, and accuses the nursing home of regularly using aging and tattered slings, but throwing newer equipment into use only when Tennessee Health Department inspectors arrived.
Three former Cambridge House employees say administrators hid daily-use equipment from inspectors, only to later pull it out after tucking away the newer items until the next state visit.
On Monday, Countiss filed a $2 million personal injury lawsuit in Bristol, Tenn. General Sessions Court arguing that Cambridge House “knowingly, intentionally and recklessly placed the safety of its residents .... in harm’s way to save money.”

Admittance and Discharge
Cambridge House administrators would not answer questions when Bristol Herald Courier and 11 Connects reporters visited the Bellebrook Road nursing home Thursday. Cambridge House is owned by AltaCare Corp., based in Alpharetta, Ga.
A letter faxed to the newspaper later that day by Cambridge House confirmed “an incident involving use of clinical equipment, resulting in an injury that was treated in accordance with accepted clinical standards of practice.”
The fax also stated that a hospital initially treated the patient, and that she returned to Cambridge House, where she stayed for several months.
“At the time of the resident’s discharge from the Cambridge House the injury was resolved,” the fax concluded.
Brightwell eventually left the nursing home for Bristol Regional Medical Center and then Wellmont Hospice House, where she died following a bout with pneumonia, said Countiss’ lawyer, Bristol, Tenn.-based Parke Morris.
“You’re looking at a ... woman with no health problems whatsoever until this happened,” Morris said in a July interview. “She hadn’t been to the hospital for 30 years before this.”
Granddaughter Amy Shell noted in an interview that Brightwell lived through her twilight years without ever needing prescriptions for such common elderly ailments as high blood pressure or cholesterol.
“Her cholesterol was lower than mine,” Shell said.
Brightwell landed in a Cambridge House bed late last October, to rehabilitate an ankle she fractured at her Bristol, Tenn., home, where she lived alone, except for nightly visits from relatives.
At Cambridge House, months of physical therapy flew by until she finally was able to stand without help for a full five minutes. Although a discharge day was never set, Shell said Brightwell likely would have left the nursing home by late February.
Expectations changed the day the hammock sling snapped, with Brightwell awkwardly slamming to the floor on her left side.
Because of her age, the bone would not heal on its own, Morris said. And, at her age, surgery to amputate the leg might have killed her.
The only option left for the aging matriarch was to rely on pain pills. Family members said it didn’t offer much help.
“Mom would lay in bed and say ‘Help me please, help me God, Jesus,’ and this would go on for hours,” Countiss said.

Equipment and Inspections

Former nursing aide Dickie Norris recalled in a Thursday interview the threadbare condition of the three hammock swings used at Cambridge House from last year until soon after Brightwell’s fall.
“They were frail ... like a worn out pair of jeans,” said Norris, who joined the nursing home in June 2008 and left in March.
Former nursing aide Brian Gross, who worked at the nursing home from May 2008 until October 2008, did not trust the slings.
“In those slings, I wouldn’t want to be lifted in it, and I weigh only 140 pounds,” he said.
Gross estimated that many of the nursing home’s patients weigh more than 200 pounds.
Brightwell weighed roughly 180 pounds, according to Shell, her granddaughter.
The lifts remained in use until four weeks after Brightwell’s fall. Norris said he was lifting a patient out of bed and had him in midair when an administrator appeared and told him to get the patient down and hand over the sling.
“Then they ordered slings, but they wouldn’t work on the (pulley) machines,” Norris said. “We couldn’t get people up for physical therapy for weeks.”
The hammock slings might have been discarded months earlier, had state inspectors seen them. Past nursing home employees said the Cambridge House administration went so far as to hide shabby equipment during health department inspections.
Former nursing aide Tony Apple, in a sworn deposition provided by lawyer Parke Morris, said that administrators pulled out newer equipment specifically for annual state inspections.
“Once the state inspection was over, the old slings came out,” Apple said in the deposition.
Apple’s statements are used in Countiss’ lawsuit.
“The defendant knowingly allowed frayed, dangerous slings to remain in use rather than spend the money to properly supply the facility with safe, non-frayed, hammock transfer slings,” the lawsuit states.
Gross recalled that the slings shown at inspection were slightly used, but in much better shape than the ones kept in daily circulation.
Not only were the hammock slings in ill shape, said Shawna Caudill, a former Cambridge House nursing manager, but the bedsheets, towels and other linens showed considerable wear, too.
Caudill, who joined Cambridge House in April 2007 and left in November 2008, said the administration purposely overlooked the shabby quality of equipment.
“The faulty equipment was definitely brought up at many meetings, but it all boiled down to cost,” Caudill said.
One administrator’s “exact words were to put on my big-girl panties and deal with it.”

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Flag Comment Posted by pnp1000 on October 04, 2009 at 9:24 pm

So sad, but you don’t put mom in nursing facility for a broken ankle. I see a lot of people lining up for a lawsuit, where were they when this 97 year old lady needed them for a little help around the house while her ankle healed? Sounds like someone mad a bad decision putting her in a nursing facility.

Flag Comment Posted by Tell Us More on October 01, 2009 at 2:11 pm

I would very much like to respond to the comments made by “Ducky.“ I find the statements about “not dying from a broken leg” very uneducated in nature but considering this was stated by a lay person I will seize the opportunity for a “teachable moment.“ Indeed patients can and do die from fractured femurs. The femur is the longest bone in the body which is very vascular in nature due to its size. In lay terms, blood is manufactured in the bones. Patients can hemorrhage from a severe fracture. However, in the patient above I can pretty safely say this was not the case. In the elderly fractured femurs can be deadly. This is a well known fact in the medical community. Given this information, medical professional must be cognizant and respectful of the fatal consequences. Just as this applies to nursing homes which provide care and services to the elderly population. Nursing Homes have a DUTY to provide care which avoids any potential situation which could cause such an injury. It appears that in this case sadly they failed to do so. As far as the cause of death for this poor lady, a fractured femur listed on the death certificate would be a fair statement simply because the term negligence isn’t allowed. I feel the part the layperson might not understand is that when an elderly person sustains a fractured femur they also sustain “Hazards of Immobility” such as pneumonia, bedsores, malnutrition, dehydration, a compromised circulatory system which supplies blood and nutrients required to heal and last but not least depression. I’m sure that this dear lady endured most of these complications brought on by no fault of her own or her family. My thoughts and prayers go out to them.

Flag Comment Posted by dale on September 30, 2009 at 10:04 pm

The real problem in my Moms case it’s murder and you don’t seem to be able to get them arrested for it and that is wrong.So you make them pay anyway you can.I don’t know what went on with this family but with mine when they killed my Mom we sued mostly for change with how things was done there.And by what I hear it did help there.We got very lil money but maybe we saved a life.

Flag Comment Posted by ducky on September 30, 2009 at 9:32 pm

Hmmm lets see what the problem is with all this…The Brightwell family brought there mother back to The Cambridge House after the event that injured her .... whats wrong with that picture… seems to me that if you were this afraid that you should have taken her to one of the many other nursing homes in this area… People you dont die from a fractured leg and most important you dont go to a hospic facility for a fractured leg….its most sad that anyone dies no matter the reason young or old and yes im sadened for the familys loss….The 4 employess coming forth to now tell this tell of woe….think about it why are they no longer there ... why did they not blow the whistle when they thought this was going on….hmm money seeking no dout now that a case has been filled…I am sadened by all this! What is the money they wish to gian going for to bring here back ( ah no ) to the have the eternal flame glow in here honar or just to line the familys pocket…whats wrong with America that now we are sueing nursing homes for every Little thing We have all seen the adds must be a lucertive sorce of income right now. Do these layers and familys not relise that most of us will end up in one… help reframe the laws as they stand ..... if we kill the nursing home industry where will you be in your old age dont expect your kids to take care of you… equiptment fails wheater it be a chair you set in at mcdonalds…a eletric door at walmart…a traffic light…a elevator..the brakes on your car ...where are the 2 million dollar law suits…maybe we all need the Parke Morses of the world on speed dial

Flag Comment Posted by bamdog2004 on September 30, 2009 at 12:57 am

lilboy, apparantly you didn’t read the story very well.
Shawna Caudill was employed well over a year at this facility, from april of 2007 to november of 2008 I believe is what the story states. Believe me people these accusations are reported to the state many many times and nothing is done about them as they always somehow know when they are coming, there is never and I do mean never a surprise visit from state. They have a code that is called over the intercom if state comes into the building and people are rushed around to do what needs to be done for things to be perfect for state. There are complaints on top of complaints on Cambridge House and still yet they are still up and running. This place is absolutely horrible to work for and it’s even more horrible to be a patient there. Now as far as Shawna Caudill, she was an excellant nursing manager and would go beyond and above her call of duty for the employees there and the patients also. She did not uphold any abuse or negligence on patients. How do you know if these accusations were not reported long before this and they are just coming out. Also I am sure that if this family had a choice that they would not have sent their loved one back to Cambridge House but nursing homes don’t always have a bed available and sometimes the patient can not be cared for at home by the family members. If you are in a nursing home and become ill they will hold the bed that you are in for a time period and maybe this is exactly what happened with this family, maybe there was no other choice but Cambridge House. Don’t come down on this family and employees of Cambridge House until you have spent time in their shoes. Can you imagine what an employer would do if they found out that an employee had reported such things as this? Believe me, you would not hold a position at this nursing home very long. So like I said maybe these issues had been reported long before this and nothing had been done until now, once the family got involved. I guess the old saying still goes, don’t judge unless thou be judged.

Flag Comment Posted by dale on September 29, 2009 at 9:13 pm

I don’t think it’s bashing if there killing people. A Nursing Home KILLED my mother. I can say that and not worried about them suing me because we proved it in court. She was overdosed on her meds for one. And when they dropped her and didn’t tell anyone she died of internal bleeding and had a broken leg. Some let us know and what had happen and I think them for it. Some lied and took up for the rest home to keep there jobs. I hope there get what Mama did some day. I went to see her two to three times a day and this still happen.

Flag Comment Posted by mycotapuff on September 29, 2009 at 3:26 pm

First and foremost..my deepest sympathy goes out to this family. This was a horrible accident and although we in the public reading this story form our own opinion of how awful this and all other nursing homes are. There are a multitude of nursing homes in our region. Not all are understaffed, underpaid or use faulty equipment. We need not attack all nursing homes or their former employees.

Flag Comment Posted by lilboy on September 29, 2009 at 10:13 am

First of all, I would like to express my deepest sympathy to the family of Anne Brightwell.
Now with regard to the 3 former employees who are now speaking out: Why are they former employees? Why did they wait until they became former employees to bring the so-called neglegence to the public’s attention? Also in reading this article it appears these individuals were not even employeed at this facility for a year!
If there is known neglegence then it is the responsibility of any and all emloyees to bring it to the attention of the facility… if the facility does not handle the matter to your satisfaction then take it to the next level? Did Dickie Norris, Brian Gross, Tony Apple, or Shawna Caudill? NO they did not… aren’t they just as liable as this facility?

Flag Comment Posted by CITIZEN X on September 29, 2009 at 9:55 am

The Corporations, that run these facilities that have been exposed recently, all contribute to political campaigns.  They contribute to both sides; they just want to make sure that no matter who wins they have someone that owes them a favor or who can watch their backs. 

Look at what happens when these facilities get inspected.  NOTHING.  They get written up, and then the facilities ignore the report, and then the next time they get written up again.  There are no fines, and the inspectors are reluctant to shut any of them down (even when they have just cause), because they are concerned about where the patients and residents will go.  There simply isn’t anywhere for that many displaced people that need care to go.

That is why there needs to be a MAJOR push for new laws to associate fines with each violation of the inspections.  A fine being charged would “encourage” these facilities to follow the standards that they are supposed to provide.

Flag Comment Posted by wm95 on September 29, 2009 at 7:16 am

Please remember that Ron Ramsey, candidate for governor, sponsored a bill to limit the liability of nursing home administrators and owners.

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