Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Hospital staff saw crisis unfold

Officials: Nursing home reported no issues to state, county

- By Paula McMahon, Susannah Bryan, Stephen Hobbs and Erika Pesantes Staff writers

They came in one after the other. Three patients with “extraordin­arily high” body temperatur­es were rushed into the emergency room at Memorial Regional Hospital from the nursing home across the street.

“It set off a red flag,” Judy Frum, the hospital’s chief nursing officer, said Thursday. “We walked over to see if we could offer assistance.”

Frum quickly came to the conclusion that had apparently eluded nursing home administra­tors:

“I thought it was an extreme situation and we had to get people out,” Frum said.

What Frum and others from Memorial found at The Rehabilita­tion Center at Hollywood Hills sent them into crisis mode. The scene at the nursing home was chaotic: Sweltering heat filled the building, where the air conditioni­ng had been knocked out since Sunday.

The seniors looked dehydrated and

in distress. They were warm to the touch.

Fire-rescue workers were going room to room to check their conditions, triaging patients, based on the severity of their needs, according to radio transmissi­ons archived by the audio streaming website Broad castify. Within 10 minutes, they found three people dead. Within 20, the number rose to five.

Rescue workers started calling for help from other agencies.

Hospital staff ferried stretchers and wheelchair­s across the street to bring patients to cool sanctuary at the emergency room. They were the lucky ones. Eight of the residents — ages 70 to 99 — didn’t make it.

When asked for a comment Thursday on the new details, administra­tors at the nursing home referred the Sun Sentinel to Natasha Anderson, CEO of the Larkin Behavioral Health Services psychiatri­c hospital, which is in the same building as the nursing home.

Anderson was at the nursing home until Monday, when she left on a shift change. She said officials at the home were told by FPL that utility workers were going to come Monday and Tuesday but never did. Staff used spot coolers, fans and gave residents water and ice, she said.

“We made every effort to prepare for the storm’s arrival and we did everything to comply with state and federal requiremen­ts,” she said.

Despite filing four status updates on Monday and Tuesday, the nursing home never reported to a state health department online database that patients were at risk, said a spokeswoma­n for the Agency for Health Care Administra­tion.

“At no time did the facility report that conditions had become dangerous,” Mallory McManus said in an email.

Broward County officials said the home alerted them about the situation on Tuesday, but when asked if it had any medical needs or emergencie­s, it did not request help.

The potential for tragedy posed by nursing home residents trapped in a building for days without air conditioni­ng was not unforeseen. After Hurricane Wilma in 2005, Florida lawmakers proposed legislatio­n dealing with the issue, but it died in committee. Shortly after that, Florida nursing home experts and providers attended a summit on disaster planning. One of the lessons learned from Wilma, according to their final report: nursing homes should consider “generator powered air-conditioni­ng.”

Hollywood police have begun a criminal investigat­ion and were interviewi­ng witnesses on Thursday who had been in the home at 1200 North 35th Ave.

Authoritie­s obtained a search warrant and were expected to begin combing the building for evidence, said Raelin Storey, a spokeswoma­n for the city of Hollywood.

Dr. Craig Mallak, Broward’s medical examiner, provided a preliminar­y list of the victims and the time and location where they were pronounced dead — all on Wednesday:

Albertina Vega, 99, discovered dead at the facility at 2:55 a.m. by staff.

Carolyn Eatherly, 78, pronounced dead at hospital at 5 a.m.

Manuel Mario Mendieta, 96, pronounced dead at the nursing home by Fire-Rescue at 5:46 a.m.

Gail Nova, 70, pronounced dead at hospital at 6:49 a.m.

Bobby Owens, 84, pronounced dead by Fire-Rescue at the nursing home at 6:57 a.m.

Miguel Antonio Franco, 92, pronounced dead at the nursing home by Fire-Rescue at 6:59 a.m.

Estella Hendricks, 71, pronounced dead at hospital at 7:53 a.m.

Betty Hibbard, 84, pronounced dead at hospital at 3:09 p.m.

Mallak said he could not release any further details because of Hollywood’s ongoing investigat­ion.

The first death – Vega – apparently set off no alarms, at least outside the nursing home. Officials were not notified of the death, Storey said.

Vega had a Do Not Resuscitat­e Order in place when she died and her remains were initially taken to a funeral home, Storey said.

After police learned of the other deaths and began their investigat­ion, the Broward Medical Examiner’s Office picked up Vega’s remains from the funeral home to conduct an autopsy.

Storey said the nursing home had some power but the air conditioni­ng was not fully functionin­g.

Authoritie­s say that a total of 145 residents were evacuated from the nursing home after they became aware “that a crisis was unfolding at the facility.”

Detectives, state and federal regulators are investigat­ing what happened in the home during and after the storm.

Sen. Bill Nelson wrote to federal officials on Thursday urging them to hold those responsibl­e for the deaths accountabl­e.

“I am even more troubled that there was a functionin­g hospital across the street from the nursing home, and yet these residents remained trapped in extreme temperatur­es for multiple days,” Nelson wrote. “Failure to transfer them to a hospital some 50 yards away is unforgivab­le.”

The 152-bed nursing home has a history of “higher than average deficienci­es, below average ratings, and inadequate emergency preparedne­ss plans,” Nelson wrote.

Nelson said it was unclear if the home’s generator was working during Hurricane Irma, noting that an unannounce­d inspection in 2016 found it had a temporary generator that failed to meet code requiremen­ts.

Hollywood officials said every aspect of operations at the nursing home is under investigat­ion. “We are looking at the temperatur­e in the facility, the staffing in the facility,” Storey said.

Nursing home staff knew the air conditioni­ng was not working on Sunday and set up fans to try and cool residents, according to an agency complaint outlining the emergency action.

Between 1:30 a.m. and 5 a.m. on Wednesday, several residents were in respirator­y or cardiac distress, according to the complaint.

The building was served by two transforme­rs — one for the building and one for the air conditioni­ng. The transforme­r serving the building came back after the storm. However, the one used to power the air conditioni­ng was damaged by a falling tree and was not functionin­g on Wednesday morning.

The home had one generator, to power “critical” needs such as oxygen machines, but it did not power the air conditioni­ng, the nursing home’s administra­tor Jorge Carballo said Wednesday through a representa­tive.

By close of business Thursday, officials said 39 Florida nursing homes were still without power, down from 150 the day before.

Florida long-term care experts and providers attending a 2006 hurricane summit on disaster planning listed “generator powered air-conditioni­ng” as something worth considerin­g.

Their final report also said prioritize­d power grids had not been revised in a long time, and nursing homes needed to let their utility companies know they had “patients dependent on power” to run ventilator­s, dialysis machines, oxygen and feeding tubes.

A bill introduced during the 2006 Florida legislativ­e session would have encouraged but not mandated that each nursing home in the state have an emergency power backup and provide help to residents evacuated from other homes, if needed.

The bill would have reimbursed nursing homes up to half of the cost of entering into a contract for an emergency generator. Homes located in 10 counties, including Broward, Palm Beach and Miami-Dade, were eligible.

The bill passed the House of Representa­tives with only one vote against it but died in the state Senate in May 2006.

 ?? CARLINE JEAN/STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Vendetta Craig of Miramar, whose mother was a patient at The Rehabilita­tion Center at Hollywood Hills, expresses anger Thursday over the fatalities. Her mother is now at Memorial Regional Hospital.
CARLINE JEAN/STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Vendetta Craig of Miramar, whose mother was a patient at The Rehabilita­tion Center at Hollywood Hills, expresses anger Thursday over the fatalities. Her mother is now at Memorial Regional Hospital.
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 ?? CARLINE JEAN/STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Janice Connelly, of Hollywood, sets up a makeshift memorial for the eight who died.
CARLINE JEAN/STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Janice Connelly, of Hollywood, sets up a makeshift memorial for the eight who died.

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