The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Lawsuit: Scalding bath water caused disabled man’s death

Complete Care at Home accused of negligence.

- By J.D. Capelouto jdcapelout­o@ajc.com

Though he was physically disabled, family members say Bradley Downing had a good life. The 41-year-old had graduated from North Gwinnett High School, competed in the Special Olympics and was relatively wellknown.

That was all taken away from him when an at-home caretaker gave him a bath with scalding hot water last year, later resulting in his death, a lawsuit alleges.

The lawsuit, filed last week in DeKalb County State Court, says the Dunwoody-based company Complete Care at Home was negligent and caused the wrongful death of Downing.

“The case is really about ... improper training and supervisio­n of the home health care profession­al,” said attorney Lloyd Bell, representi­ng Downing’s family. “This never should’ve happened.”

Bill Kaplan, the business manager for Complete Care, declined to comment on the case due to federal medical privacy laws. Complete Care is licensed in 15 metro Atlanta counties, according to the company’s website.

Downing, who suffered a brain injury as a young child, was developmen­tally stunted and was mostly non-verbal, Bell said. A Complete Care nurse, who was not named in the lawsuit, was bathing him at his family’s Gwinnett home when she set the water temperatur­e to “scalding,” the suit alleges.

“She didn’t test the water temperatur­e before starting to rinse him off,” Bell said. “Bradley screams at the top of his lungs . ... He was severely burned across his upper torso.”

His mother rushed into the bathroom, and the nurse told her what had happened, Bell said.

Downing was rushed to the Grady Memorial Hospital, where he spent two and a half months in the burn unit. His body swelled, he developed pneumonia and he was eventually released into hospice care, where he died a short time later in May 2018, Bell said.

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