The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Elder-care oversight lax amid COVID-19

Georgia’s record on inspecting nursing homes is poor.

- By Carrie Teegardin Carrie.Teegardin@ajc.com

State inspectors fanned out across Georgia this summer to conduct federally required checks of infection-control protocols at every nursing home, reporting few problems.

But when August arrived, the numbers told a different story: It was the worst month yet for COVID-19 deaths and infections at Georgia’s facilities caring for vulnerable seniors.

In Laurens County, the local newspaper was packed with obituaries and residents were expressing grave concerns about conditions at the Dublinair Health and Rehab nursing home, commission Chairwoman Brenda Chain said. At least 102 residents and 51 staff have tested positive, and 24 residents have died — nearly all since early August. “With this being a small town and everything, just about everybody knows somebody that this has affected,”

Chain said.

In Newton County, public officials got copies of an anonymous letter from a “relative” asking for an external investigat­ion of the Riverside Health Care Center. Reports now show that an outbreak in the nursing home that began in early July has ballooned as of Tuesday to 102 residents testing positive and 32 residents dying.

In Atlanta, while Dunwoody Health and Rehabilita­tion Center had reported it was virtually free of COVID-19 until mid-July, family members described cases of malnutriti­on, unexpected deaths, unanswered phone calls and callous demands to immediatel­y send a funeral home to pick up their loved ones’ remains. Reports now show 118 residents and 63 staff have tested positive, and 28 residents have died.

“I don’t know how that facility is still in existence,” said Khalid

Rashied, who pulled his mother out of the facility, fearing she wouldn’t survive.

Because of the risk of the coronaviru­s, for nearly six months families have been barred from making routine visits to check on loved ones in long-term care

homes. Representa­tives of Georgia’s long-term care ombudsman’s office have been locked out, too.

Those tight limits mean that at one of the most dangerous times in history to live in a senior care facility, oversight has been left pri

marily up to a Georgia agency that has struggled for years to keep a close watch on nursing homes, assisted living facilities and per

sonal care homes. Georgia lags behind every state but one in completing standard

inspection­s of nursing homes on time, the AJC found. Though the reports are supposed to be done annually, federal records show that 42% of the state’s nursing homes — 152 facilities — have not undergone a comprehens­ive inspection for at least 18 months, and some for more than two years.

Georgia also was called out in 2017 as among the nation’s worst at investigat­ing complaints that patients may be at imminent risk of serious injury or death.

The lagging inspection­s could leave patients at risk in a state that has one of the nation’s highest shares of nursing homes with poor records. One in 4 Georgia nursing homes is rated as well below average, or 1-star, in the federal system.

Shortcomin­gs are widespread as well in the state’s assisted living and personal care homes, the AJC found in an investigat­ion last year.

The state Department of Community Health, the agency responsibl­e for oversight, said delays in

inspection­s are due to a shortage of inspectors and its suspension of routine inspection­s at the start of the pandemic, which created a backlog. Of the 57 “surveyor” positions Georgia has to inspect nursing homes, 24 are vacant.

DCH also said it followed federal guidance in March to focus only on infection control checks and complaints where residents could be in immediate jeopardy. It did most of that work remotely through the spring.

DCH resumed on-site inspection­s after the federal government in June ordered states to do so by July 31 to look for infection control issues. Georgia was among the last states to inspect all homes, using outside vendors to help.

DCH said it is complying with a recent federal directive to conduct quick on-site visits at homes that report new outbreaks. DCH said it is also conducting complaint investigat­ions now and coordinati­ng with federal “strike force” teams inspecting nursing homes.

But so far, at least, the state has released to the public only a handful of reports citing homes for violations, even as deadly new outbreaks continue. Residents of long-term care facilities make up

about 40% of the state’s overall COVID-19 deaths, and the August death count for senior care residents was higher than in any month of the pandemic.

Some families say the state must be missing something.

Rashied said while his mother was at the Dunwoody Health nurs

ing home for rehab after breaking a bone, he would call regularly to check on her. But the phone usually went unanswered. He said he was told she would be tested weekly for COVID-19 after being exposed to another resident who tested positive, but she apparently wasn’t, he said. A test done on the day she left was positive, but Rashied wasn’t told of

the results for two days. He said his mother was so drugged up when he picked her up from the home she was unable to talk, eat or even sit up, and he contends she wasn’t given proper follow-up care for her broken bone.

“I don’t know if there is a worse place I could send my mother to,” Rashied said. “Hell is the only thing I can think of.”

But it turned out that his mother was one of the lucky ones. Unlike at least 28 other residents at the home, she survived.

Dunwoody Health is operated by Atlanta-based SavaSenior

Care, one of the nation’s largest senior care chains. The company attributed the outbreak to the facility’s location in a “highly

populated urban area” where there is a heightened exposure to COVID-19. The company said it was working hard to control the outbreak but said the pandemic is difficult to contain in a congregate setting.

“There have been residents who have tested negative for the virus and those who have been asymptomat­ic,” Sava said. “As a result of our efforts, 69 residents currently at the center have recovered (from COVID-19) in our care.”

With high rates of COVID19 throughout Georgia, many long-term careoperat­ors say it’s almost impossible to block the virus completely since employees must come in and out. Even some of the state’s top-rated homes have had deadly outbreaks, especially early in the pandemic when needed amounts of personal protective equipment and tests were impossible to get.

But Georgia’s history of lax oversight increased risks for residents in facilities that have records of infection-control problems, inadequate staffing, or care violations. Plus, with families locked out residents of sub-par homes no longer had family members stop by to help and protect them.

Families want answers

The Riverside Health Care Center in Newton County, about 35 miles east of Atlanta in Covington, had reported just one resident positive for COVID-19 until early July, when the numbers started to explode. With cases and deaths rising, public officials say they got the anonymous letter asking for oversight, saying calls to the facility weren’t being answered.

The COVID-19 death toll at the 158-bed home is the second-highest among Georgia nursing homes. Local public health officials said they had provided infection-prevention training both virtually and on site and that DCH was inspecting the home. But no reports on the inspection­s have been posted.

The U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, which regulates nearly all nursing homes, told the AJC Thursday that infection-control checks were done at the home in June, July and August in response to the increase, but no public reports on the inspection­s were available yet. It’s unclear

when — or even if – state or federal officials will release any details.

A standard survey of the home

Feb. 13, before the pandemic hit, cited the home for five deficienci­es, including failingto provide a safe, clean and comfortabl­e homelike environmen­t.

The nursing home did not respond to calls from the AJC, and its website doesn’t include the kind of COVID-19 update that many nursing homes provide

online. Marcello Banes, the Newton County Commission chairman, said in a statement that he was “deeply saddened” by what was happening at the home. He called the situation at Riverside “unacceptab­le.”

The home has a 1-star federal quality rating, the lowest on the federal scale.

At Dublinair Health and Rehab,

about two hours south of Atlanta, the outbreak has been sudden and furious. Of the 24 COVID-19 deaths at the home, 23 were reported in August. Local officials said both

public health officials and DCH inspectors had been on site. But no reports had been released. Dublinair also has a 1-star rating.

The 149-bed home appears to have no website, and the administra­tor did not respond to calls from the AJC.

Bobby Pope, a pastor who officiated the funeral for his fatherin-law, a Dublinair resident who died in July, said it’s been difficult to get informatio­n from the facility or to get an answer to calls. The family was allowed to enter wearing protective equipment when the death was imminent. He said they were told the cause of death was pneumonia. “Somebody needs to get in there and check to see what is going on,” said Pope, whose mother-in-law is also a resident there.

Chain, the Laurens County Commission chairwoman, said county health officials and DCH were working with the facility to try to contain the outbreak. CMS said inspection­s were conducted at the home in June and August, but no inspection­s reports were yet available.

The most recent standard

inspection of Dublinair was in September 2018, when among the violations were infection prevention and control issues, government records show.

Home finally punished

When Darryl Harris in early July went to pick up his father, Clarence, from Dunwoody Health and Rehabilita­tion, he barely recognized him. His father was admitted to the Sandy Springs facility for rehab about a month earlier after a hospital stay for pneumonia, his son said. But even though the facility said his father was ready for discharge, the 92-year-old couldn’t even stand

and had lost at least 20 pounds, Harris said. The Korean War vet was admitted to the VA Hospital with dehydratio­n, malnourish­ment and a pressure wound.

Though Darryl Harris said the nursing home had told him that his father had tested negative for COVID-19, the hospital tested him, and he was positive. He died Aug. 2.

“Dunwoody killed him in my opinion,” Harris said.

Susan Carini wonders what

the state oversight agency did in response to all the infections and deaths at the nursing home.

In late June, she and her sister were told their mother, Patricia, had been exposed to a worker who had tested positive, and although

within days the 87-year-old started to develop symptoms, they were told repeatedly she tested nega

tive. As her symptoms gotworse, the sisters wanted a doctor to see her. But they never heard back about whether that even hap

pened, and getting through to anyone for updates was almost impossible.

The sisters felt like they had no way to advocate for their mother,

who waswheelch­air-bound. “It was as if she were sealed off from us,

and in truth, she was,” Carini said. On July 18, the home reported Patricia tested positive. Two days later, she was dead. The nursing home called shortly after the death and insisted the family pick out a funeral home “within an hour” so her mother’s remains could be removed immediatel­y, Carini said. Other families told the AJC they were also hounded to quickly arrange for their loved ones who died to be picked up. Carini was incensed when she saw her mother’s death certificat­e: COVID-19 wasn’t even listed. Diabetes was included. The thing is, her mother didn’t even have diabetes. Carini insisted the record be set straight, so her mom’s death isn’t left out of the pandemic’s deadly toll.

DCH’s last standard survey of the facility is dated Nov. 1, 2018, where federal records show that among the deficienci­es cited were problems with infection prevention and control.

CMS told the AJC that state

inspectors had done an infection control inspection at Dunwoody Health in mid-July and found no violations. But CMS ordered the state to conduct another check.

The federal agency revealed to the AJC on Thursday that the more

thorough inspection discovered a devastatin­g failure of both infection control and tracking of the COVID19 outbreak. The report said that “as a result of these failures” 94 residents and 47 staff members tested positive for COVID-19, and 14 had died as of July 30.

CMS notified the facility it was imposing a fine of $21,393 per day — for a 13-day period in July and August — for the violations.

SavaSenior­Care said the facility is working on a required plan of correction in response to the findings.

Kimberly Pennell said she is glad the facility is finally being punished, but she said the actions seemed too little, too late.

Her husband got COVID-19 at Dunwoody Health and died unexpected­ly in August, five days after she was told he had recovered.

Pennell said she had filed a series of complaints against the facility over several years, including some related to sanitation. Only recently did an inspector call her to

inquire about something she said she reported about three years ago. “It takes the deaths of all these people, including my husband, for the state to make a phone call to follow up?” she said. “Come on.”

Pennell said she always tried to follow the chain of command in making complaints, going to

the facility, the corporatio­n, the state, the ombudsman’s office.

“I did it for years,” she said. “Nothing changed. Things got worse.”

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Clarence Harris (center) was active in church, including in the choir. When son Darryl Harris in July picked him up from Dunwoody Health and Rehabilita­tion, he barely recognized him. The ailing 92-year-old was admitted to the VA Hospital, which tested him for COVID-19, and he was positive. He died Aug. 2.
CONTRIBUTE­D Clarence Harris (center) was active in church, including in the choir. When son Darryl Harris in July picked him up from Dunwoody Health and Rehabilita­tion, he barely recognized him. The ailing 92-year-old was admitted to the VA Hospital, which tested him for COVID-19, and he was positive. He died Aug. 2.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Patricia Carini (right), seen with daughter Susan Carini and Susan’s dog Sable, was a resident at Dunwoody Health and Rehabilita­tion. On July 18, the home reported Patricia tested positive. Two days later, she was dead. Carini was incensed by her mother’s death certificat­e: COVID-19 wasn’t even listed.
CONTRIBUTE­D Patricia Carini (right), seen with daughter Susan Carini and Susan’s dog Sable, was a resident at Dunwoody Health and Rehabilita­tion. On July 18, the home reported Patricia tested positive. Two days later, she was dead. Carini was incensed by her mother’s death certificat­e: COVID-19 wasn’t even listed.

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