Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Federal Investigators Fault Massachusetts Nursing Home Over Patient's Suicide
An 81-year-old resident who killed himself in a Salem nursing home had repeatedly mused about suicide in the days leading to his death, but health workers failed to act on a note about his suicidal thoughts tucked into medical records, state investigators found. Federal regulators are sanctioning the Grosvenor Park Health Center, part of a troubled out-of-state chain, for not taking measures that might have prevented the suicide 鈥 a failure of action that resulted in 鈥渁ctual harm鈥 to the resident. The regulators, however, have not disclosed what penalties the nursing home might face. (Lazar, 10/3)
For years, wealthy nursing home operator Philip Esformes seemed to live in perpetual motion, using private jets to travel between his Water Tower Place condominium and his mansions in Miami and Los Angeles. Now federal authorities are applying extraordinary court pressure to keep Esformes locked in a Florida detention cell where he awaits trial for allegedly orchestrating an unprecedented $1 billion Medicaid and Medicare bribery and kickback scheme. (Jackson and Marx, 10/4)
Nursing homes and other senior facilities nationwide are using a controversial technique called doll therapy to ease anxiety among their residents with dementia. Senior care providers and experts say the dolls are an alternative to medication and help draw in elderly people who are no longer able to participate in many activities. ... Caregivers aren鈥檛 trying to make their charges believe the dolls are real infants, and they don鈥檛 want to infantilize the seniors, Drew said. They are just 鈥渢rying to meet them where they are and communicate with them in a way that makes sense to them. (Gorman,10/4)
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