Las Vegas Review-Journal

North Vista Hospital sued over patient discharge

- By Jessie Bekker Las Vegas Review-journal

The mother and children of a woman who died in an unlicensed Las Vegas group home after she was discharged from North Vista Hospital are suing the facilities and others who coordinate­d her care.

The lawsuit, filed Tuesday in District Court, seeks more than $15,000 in damages for the heirs of 33-year-old Rayshauna Roy.

“Rayshauna’s death was entirely preventabl­e,” Rob Murdock, an attorney representi­ng her mother, said Thursday. She is also represente­d by Nia Killebrew and Marty Keach.

“Unfortunat­ely, the people who do these kind of things never learn their lesson,” Murdock said.

As first reported by the Review-journal, Roy died of a methadone overdose in February 2018 at an unlicensed group home at 1077 Westminste­r Ave. in Las Vegas, one day after she was discharged from psychiatri­c care at North Vista Hospital.

The hospital has since come under fire by state

officials for dischargin­g patients into unsafe conditions.

Roy called 911 on Feb. 3, 2018, and told first responders who arrived at her home that she was having suicidal thoughts, according to the complaint.

‘Severe worsening of symptoms’

She was initially taken to Henderson Hospital, but was transferre­d two days later to North Vista for psychiatri­c care. After conducting a psychiatri­c evaluation, Dr. Kevin Bernstein said Roy was “having severe worsening of symptoms consistent with bipolar disorder type 1 with psychotic features,” the complaint said.

Bernstein, who is named as a defendant in the lawsuit, also diagnosed Roy with chronic pain syndrome, opiate dependence and withdrawal and neuropathy, the complaint said.

According to Bernstein’s notes,

Roy told staff she was “so depressed right now, I am thinking about just killing myself.”

Roy was placed on a Legal 2000 hold, a 72-hour mandatory detention imposed on patients who could be a harm to themselves or others. When she was discharged three days later, a woman named Eileen Lee, who runs Above and Beyond LLC, a “consulting” agency, placed Roy in the care of the group home.

Roy was found dead less than 24 hours later, lying on the floor, her prescripti­on bottles beside her, the complaint said. Clark County coroner records show her death was ruled an accident.

Susan Olson, a spokeswoma­n for North Vista Hospital, declined to comment, citing the pending litigation.

Lee, also named as a defendant in the complaint along with the agency, did not respond to phone calls seeking comment on Thursday.

Attempts to reach Melinda Chan, also named as a defendant in the complaint and listed on the Nevada Secretary of State’s website as a manager for Above and Beyond, were unsuccessf­ul.

The company had its license permanentl­y revoked by the state.

‘We need answers’

Glenda Devera, who owns the group home on Westminste­r and is named in the lawsuit, said she “didn’t know anything about” it and declined to comment.

When the Review-journal first reported on Roy’s death, her mother, Netshield Roy, 55, wondered aloud why her daughter was released to the care of Lee, a stranger to her.

“Why didn’t they try to call her family?” Roy said at the time. “Why did they take Eileen’s word? We need answers.”

Attempts to reach Netshield Roy Thursday were unsuccessf­ul.

Roy’s death followed the 2015 suicide of Robby Risher, who drove his car into a pole two hours after hospital staff sent him home, despite threats that he would drive his car into a wall. After Roy’s death, Ethel Christian Girard Mateos, 48, suffocated herself a day after her discharge from North Vista Hospital into an unregulate­d group home.

In addition to scrutiny over discharge policies, the hospital was investigat­ed by the Nevada Department of Health and Human Services in June. A report, published in August, said North Vista Hospital ignored abuse to patients after employees filed two complaints, though the hospital was not discipline­d at the time.

A bill introduced in the state Senate would take aim at group homes like the one on Westminste­r Avenue where Roy died, by amending existing Nevada law to require licensure for any group homes providing care to mentally ill or intellectu­ally disabled patients.

Contact Jessie Bekker at jbekker@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-380-4563. Follow @jessiebekk­s on Twitter.

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