At a press conference on March 28, 2012, U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) called for reauthorization of the Older Americans Act (OAA), legislation that provides support for American elders. The terms “elder” and “older person” here refer to people aged 65 or older. Fourteen other senators joined Sanders in calling…
Maryland Nursing Home Lawyer Blog
Federal Government Launches Antipsychotic Medication Initiative to Protect Nursing Home Residents
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), the federal agency that administers Medicare and Medicaid , has launched an initiative to promote reducing the use of antipsychotic medication in nursing home patients. The goal of the initiative is to spotlight the misuse of these medications in nursing homes, improve…
Study Shows Higher Mortality Among Elderly Female Nursing Home Residents with Vitamin D Deficiencies
A recent study found that elderly women residing in nursing homes may face greater rates of mortality if they are not getting enough vitamin D. The study will appear in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism, a publication of The Endocrine Society. Researchers at the Medical University of Graz,…
Proposed Maryland Legislation Would Increase Criminal Penalties for Elder Abuse
A bill that would increase criminal penalties for people who engage in elder abuse has met with unfavorable reports in the judiciary committees of both houses of the Maryland Legislature. The bill, known as the John H. Taylor Act, has been introduced in the Legislature several times, and its supporters…
Resident Charged with Arson for Fire in Assisted-Living Facility
Prosecutors in Northfield, Minnesota have charged a 46 year-old assisted-living facility resident with arson after he allegedly set fire to clothing in his closet, displacing forty other residents for several days. William Jerald Kelly reportedly came forward to admit he started the fire. The criminal complaint, filed in Rice County…
Man Who Won $200 Million Judgment Against Nursing Home for His Mother’s Wrongful Death Faces Corporate Shell Game When Trying to Collect
Suffering from dementia and confined to a wheelchair, 94 year-old Florida nursing home resident Elvira Nunziata needed near-constant supervision. Still, she managed to pass through a door that should have been locked, falling down a stairwell and sustaining fatal injuries in 2004. Her son, Richard Nunziata, knew someone at the…
Nursing Home Addresses Safety Concerns, Deals with Allegations of Sexual Abuse
A Rhode Island nursing home faced an ultimatum from the government in January: fix various problems by February 1 or lose its status as a Medicare and Medicaid provider. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), the federal agency tasked with managing both programs, sent a letter to Hebert…
Maryland Nursing Home Staffer Pleads Guilty to Abuse of a Resident
A former staffer at a Timonium, Maryland nursing home pleaded guilty late last month to abuse of a vulnerable adult in the second degree. This Maryland Nursing Home Lawyer Blog previously reported on the case of Shirleen Diane Sheppard when prosecutors first indicted her last year. Sheppard worked as a…
Maryland Podiatrist Sentenced to Four Years in Prison for Scheme Involving Nursing Home Patients
A Maryland podiatrist, Larry Bernhard, was sentenced by a U.S. District Judge in Baltimore to fifty-four months in prison, plus three years’ supervised release, for a series of fraudulent bills to Medicare totaling more than $1.1 million. He pleaded guilty to charges that included health care fraud and identity theft.…
Jury Awards $200 Million in Nursing Home Wrongful Death Case Where Defense Did Not Show Up
A jury in Pinellas County, Florida rendered a $200 million verdict against the parent company of a nursing home. The lawsuit stemmed from the 2004 death of a resident who fell down a flight of stairs in a wheelchair. The case is particularly interesting not only because the verdict might…