Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Report Finds California’s Long-Term Care Ombudsmen Are Unable to Stop Abuse

According to a new report, many cases of nursing home abuse and neglect are likely going unnoticed in California. The report attributes the problem to recent budget cuts as well as conflicting ombudsman duties and conflicting confidentiality laws.

On November 3, 2009, the California Senate Office of Oversight and Outcomes released the report revealing serious defects in California’s Long-Term Care Ombudsman program. California’s Elder Abuse Investigators: Ombudsmen Shackled by Conflicting Laws and Duties can be viewed here.

California’s ombudsmen were originally charged with advocating for the elderly in nursing homes and generally providing a watchdog presence. Today, their primary task is investigating claims of abuse and neglect within nursing homes. Where they used to collaborate with nursing homes and act as a liaison between management and residents, now they are placed in an adversarial role, which grants them less access to the inner-workings of the nursing homes they cover and makes them less effective advocates. Additionally, investigations are complex and time-consuming, so most ombudsmen no longer have time to make regular nursing home visits, establish any sort of regular presence, or provide advocacy services.

Unfortunately, ombudsmen also receive more complaints than they are able to investigate. Since last year’s massive state budget cut, the ombudsman program has been left with about half of the budget it previously had. It appears that individual ombudsmen are adjusting to the loss of resources by allowing some allegations of abuse to go uninvestigated. According to the report, ombudsmen forwarded 44 percent fewer complaints to outside agencies for enforcement since the budget was cut.

The report also states that, in many cases, ombudsmen have their hands tied when they try to pursue cases of alleged abuse. Typically, when ombudsmen investigate complaints and find one they believe to be well-founded, they are instructed to forward it to the appropriate outside agency for further investigation, protection, and potential prosecution. But many of these legitimate complaints are not being forwarded. A federal law prohibits ombudsmen from forwarding a complaint without a release of identity from the person who made the complaint. But many of the elderly making complaints refuse to release their names for fear of retaliation within their nursing home. In fact, according to the report, three quarters of people who made complaints refused to release their identities.

Elderly individuals who are subjected to abuse or neglect should not have to keep quiet in order to avoid further harm in the nursing homes where they live. If you or a loved one has been mistreated in a nursing home, contact The Casiano Law Firm for a confidential consultation.

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