Truro News

Documents reveal two previously unknown nursing home pushing deaths

- BY MICHAEL TUTTON

Newly released coroner’s reports have revealed two previously unreported deaths of Nova Scotia nursing home residents injured when they were pushed down by residents with dementia.

The cases, obtained through a freedom of informatio­n request to the medical examiner, bring the number of such deaths since 2008 to 11 in the province.

“Those numbers are concerning,” said Eilon Caspi, a gerontolog­ist who has researched resident-on-resident nursing home abuse for 25 years in Canada and the United States.

“Would we accept a few deaths a year if we were talking about toddlers in a child care setting?”

The two newly revealed deaths, both since Jan. 1 last year, are the latest examples of such fatalities occurring without the Health Department or police notifying the public.

A third death during that period did become public: the case of 79-year-old Gordon Birchell was reported last year to The Canadian Press by a family friend and later confirmed by the RCMP.

Last year, The Canadian Press published reports of eight deaths since 2008 and found five had never been revealed to the public either by police or the province, and that one case wasn’t investigat­ed by the Health Department until the public revelation­s.

The latest cases occurred at Harbour View Haven in Lunenburg, while the other was at the Shannex Orchard facility in Kentville, with no police news releases in either case to inform the public that homicide investigat­ions were launched and later dropped.

The heavily edited reports say that in one case, “the decedent was found on the floor by nursing home staff after suffering a fall ... another client was seen pushing decedent causing (name redacted) to fall.”

In another case, the person who died was “pushed by another resident ... fell on the floor striking (name redacted).”

Dr. Matthew Bowes, the chief medical examiner, said in an email he’s reviewed the cases and based on comments from investigat­ors he believes all of the cases are “dementia related,” adding he isn’t authorized to review the medical records of the people who pushed the residents.

Neither home returned calls and emails requesting further informatio­n.

Caspi said the continuing flow of pushing deaths shouldn’t be regarded as normal or unavoidabl­e: “This is devastatin­g for family members.”

Caspi has followed some of the deaths in Nova Scotia, and in an academic journal article he quoted from the case of Dorothy Stultz, who died when a male resident with dementia pushed her to the ground in 2012.

After the case was publicized, Stultz’s daughter criticized the province for failing to investigat­e it.

The toll of pushing deaths has quietly continued since last year’s revelation­s, along with public criticism of the nursing home system’s oversight of people who have aggressive outbursts.

Birchell’s wife told The Canadian Press she personally witnessed the attack on her husband by an elderly woman with dementia, and said it came after previous incidents of the same resident going after her spouse.

Caspi said research suggests higher staffing levels and improved programs at nursing homes can help reduce resident-on-resident abuse, as leaving residents alone and without activity can increase their aggression.

He added that pre-assessment­s of residents need to be thorough and updated in order to assist staff in taking preventive steps to avoid mixing people inappropri­ately.

“We need to raise awareness and train staff to minimize this,” he said.

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