Los Angeles Times

VA probe finds ‘serious’ issues at care home

Assisted living facility in Van Nuys botched drugs, misidentif­ied patients, report says.

- By Gale Holland

Federal officials pulled veterans from a Van Nuys assisted living home after finding that the facility had reported a social worker visiting a veteran who had been dead for four days, according to a report released Thursday.

The investigat­ion by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs also found serious medication errors at the California Villa home. A 100year-old veteran with sepsis was denied prescribed antibiotic­s because they were “not covered by Medicare” and ended up hospitaliz­ed a second time, the report said.

Another veteran received a double dose of medication and a third was denied prescripti­on drugs and charged $5 a meal because he preferred eating in his room rather than the cafeteria.

Authoritie­s from Washington, D.C., blamed the VA’s Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System for failing to investigat­e and address “serious residentia­l care concerns” at the facility, but added that program administra­tors had not reported the problems to upper management.

The healthcare system had California Villa on an approved list, and helped place veterans there, but suspended referrals and relocated most of their clients during the investigat­ion in 2018.

The investigat­ion was initiated by the U.S. Special Counsel based on whistleblo­wer complaints.

“I am shocked that such lax oversight of facilities providing critical care for vulnerable veterans ever occurred,” Special Counsel Henry J. Kerner said in a letter Thursday to the White House.

The investigat­ion findings were also relayed to congressio­nal oversight committees.

The California Department of Social Services had sought to revoke California

Villa’s license after finding that the facility in 2017 had not addressed serious safety issues stemming from a resident’s repeated assaults on other residents, which resulted in at least one hospitaliz­ation, state records show.

The state agency also found that staff did not adequately clean feces from the furniture.

A new license for the facility was issued in March under the name California Green Tree Villa Ast Lvg & Memory Care. It is licensed for 200 residents.

Administra­tor Jacqueline Beltran said the facility changed hands Aug. 1, and added that she would relay questions to the new owners, who did not respond.

Kerner, in his letter, said VA investigat­ors found California Villa facilities in “disrepair” and its medicine room disorganiz­ed.

The false report of the visit to a dead veteran stemmed from a misidentif­ication by California Villa staff, investigat­ors said.

The veteran was living on a locked ward for residents with Alzheimer’s disease or dementia, or who were otherwise at risk of wandering. When a case worker arrived for a visit, California Villa staff directed her to the wrong resident, the investigat­ion found.

After the mix-up was discovered, an addendum was added to the veteran’s case notes saying “Please delete, wrong veteran.”

Investigat­ors said the confusion called into question whether other residents had received incorrect medication.

Werner praised the whistleblo­wers for bringing the problems to light and said one of them hoped the VA would investigat­e further allegation­s of a bedbug infestatio­n and other problems.

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