Las Vegas Review-Journal

Audit exposes youth center woes

Poor medication management, weak training policies cited

- By Ramona Giwargis Las Vegas Review-journal

A state audit on Wednesday uncovered a slew of problems at taxpayer-funded foster homes, a youth mental hospital and a juvenile correction­al center, including unsafe medication management and weak training policies.

The audit, presented Wednesday to a legislativ­e audit subcommitt­ee, focused on Summit View Youth Center, a state-operated juvenile correction­al center; Desert Willow Treatment Center, a state-run mental hospital; Nevada Homes for Youth, a state-licensed drugs and alcohol treatment center; and Genesis, a Clark County-funded foster care agency.

The providers collective­ly shelter more than 100 youths in Southern Nevada. The deficienci­es revealed in the audit ranged from flawed medication administra­tion policies to a lack of staff training, incomplete treatment plans and missing policies for reporting abuse and neglect.

“It seems like medication management is the issue that bubbles up every time we have these presentati­ons,” said Assemblywo­man Maggie Carlton, who sits on the audit subcommitt­ee. “Do we have any idea why we just can’t seem to get a handle on it?”

Deputy Legislativ­e Auditor Sandra Mcguirk said the providers need to take responsibi­lity for medication management.

“At the end of the day, they’re the ones who are administer­ing the medicine,” she said.

The audit found the most serious

AUDIT

problems at Genesis and Nevada Homes for Youth. At Genesis, a North Las Vegas foster care agency that shelters 35 youths from ages 6 to 18, children were given prescripti­on medication without a doctor’s order in their file. Three of seven youths missed 11 days of medication because staff failed to refill their prescripti­ons.

The audit also found no evidence to show that certain employees had been fingerprin­ted or trained to administer medication­s.

Genesis operates five staff foster homes and two family-run ones.

Owner Curtis Stuckey didn’t dispute the audit’s findings Wednesday but gave lawmakers an earful about what it’s like to take in Nevada’s most troubled kids.

“I’m not comfortabl­e with my own programs because we don’t have adequate staffing,” Stuckey said. “I’m one of the only agencies to step up and take these kids that no one else will take… . I sleep in the same house that was shot up by the kids. There are no policies and procedures for that.”

County officials told the Review-journal that no children at Genesis are at risk.

“We have caseworker­s visit every month,” Jill Marano, assistant director of the Clark County Department of Family Services, said in an interview. “If we had immediate safety concerns, we’d absolutely intervene right away.”

Nevada Homes for Youth, a drug and alcohol treatment center, lacked policies outlining when consent is needed to administer psychotrop­ic drugs, the audit said. Patient files were missing prescripti­on orders and some staff members were fingerprin­ted an average of 112 days after they were hired. It seems like medication management is the issue that bubbles up every time we have these presentati­ons. Do we have any idea why we just can’t seem to get a handle on it?

Similar problems surfaced at Summit View Youth Center and Desert Willow Treatment Center, the two state-run facilities. Auditors found medical files at Summit View — a correction­al facility in Las Vegas — contained dosage errors, missing staff initials, blank spaces and evidence that some kids did not get their medication for up to three days.

At Desert Willow, a mental hospital that housed an average of 18 kids, contained patient files with incomplete consent forms and missing medical informatio­n.

State officials said they have updated policies to address the issues outlined in the audit.

The state “has improved its medication management practices over the last several years,” said Karla Delgado, a spokeswoma­n for the state Division of Child and Family Services. “Although we strive for perfection, we are not there yet and appreciate the recommenda­tions from the Legislativ­e Auditors.”

Contact Ramona Giwargis at rgiwargis@reviewjour­nal. com or 702-380-4538. Follow @ Ramonagiwa­rgis on Twitter.

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