The Mercury News

Infected homes tied to poor care

Owners of nursing facilities where 17 have died of virus have history of safety issues, license denials

- By Thomas Peele and Annie Sciacca Staff writers

Lack of controls to stop dangerous infections. Not enough personal protective equipment for caregivers. Staffing so thin the facility can’t provide proper care for patients. Frequent situations that put the frail and elderly at even greater risk of getting sick and dying.

With such chaos, more relatives fear placing their loved ones in nursing homes amid the deadly pandemic sweeping the country.

Public records show that such conditions have existed for years inside a pair of nursing homes in Hayward and Orinda with the highest known toll of infections and death from COVID-19 in the Bay Area.

And, the records show, the owners of those homes have a track record of similar problems in their other facilities — a pattern experts say is all too common in the industry.

Prema and Antony Thekkek, owners of Gateway Rehabilita­tion and Care Center in Hayward, have at least seven other nursing homes with records of poor care. Crystal Solorzano, who owns Orinda Care Center and at least 10 other facilities, also has a history of state and federal safety violations at some of her facilities.

The California Department of Public Health has taken the rare step of rejecting new applicatio­ns from the Thekkeks and Solorzano to open licensed facilities a combined eight times, citing violation histories.

Both owners appear to be among what an expert called the “bad actors” in an industry where profits often come before patient needs and regulation­s are blatantly ignored. Records of 22 nursing homes they own or have previously owned show 1,110 state deficienci­es and more than 1,700 complaints over the past three years.

In 2018, the Thekkeks were forced to close a Sebastopol nursing home because of bad care; they have been turned down for licenses to run other homes five times. The state health department rejected three license applicatio­ns from Solorzano in December.

Experts say there is a correlatio­n between the owners’ records and the large coronaviru­s outbreaks at Orinda Care Center and

Gateway Rehabilita­tion and Care Center, where a combined 17 patients have died as of Friday and state data released Saturday show more than 150 staff and patients have been infected.

“It’s absolutely no surprise” that owners of facilities with bad safety records own the homes in the Bay Area with the deadliest outbreaks, said Michael Connors of the watchdog group California Advocates for Nursing Home Reform, known as CANHR. “Nursing home residents are in such grave jeopardy.”

Dr. Mehrdad Ayati, a geriatrici­an who teaches medicine at Stanford University, said homes with adequate staffing, sufficient training and whose owners act responsibl­y have been more successful at stemming outbreaks. As to the more poorly run homes, he said, “we see skilled nursing facilities who have not followed basic regulation­s related to staffing and other things — they are more at risk of getting it.”

Records show Gateway had serious problems well before the pandemic. In 2017, state inspectors found the facility broke rules meant to curb the spread of infection, including insufficie­nt changes of gloves while treating patients and failure to swap out urine bags frequently enough.

In 2019, a patient with sepsis and one with an infected wound didn’t receive critical injections of antibiotic­s because there was no one on duty qualified to give them. Another patient fell and broke bones in 2018 when an aide left her alone on the toilet despite knowing the woman had trouble keeping her balance.

Staff even struggled to properly dispose of medical waste. During an inspection last year, three washbasins filled with used hypodermic needles were found in an unlocked closet. The Thekkeks also:

• Had five license applicatio­ns — including for homes in Millbrae, Menlo Park and San Jose — denied by the state based of past performanc­e, including three rejections in 2015 because of poor care at a Bakersfiel­d facility described by advocates as having “nightmaris­h conditions.”

• Were forced to close the Fircrest Convalesce­nt Hospital in Sebastopol in 2018 when the federal government stopped it from taking Medicare patients, citing repeated safety violations and failures to provide adequate staffing.

• Have been cited across their facilities for lack of infection controls, medication errors, poor medical recordkeep­ing, lack of pharmaceut­ical services, poor food, failure to protect patients from falls, lack of staff and not safely maintainin­g the nursing homes.

“To the best of our knowledge, no other chain operator has been subject to this pattern of denials by the department,” CANHR’S executive director, Pat Mcguiness, wrote in a letter to the state health department.

Inspectors found that staff at the Bakersfiel­d home failed to contain the spread of bacterial infections and didn’t make sure doctors and family members visiting sick patients wore personal protective equipment.

The home was cited four times under the Thekkeks’ watch for conditions that put patients in “imminent danger of death or serious harm,” records show.

At the Thekkeks’ nursing home in Sebastopol, Fircrest Convalesce­nt Hospital, inspectors also found conditions during a flu outbreak in late 2017 that seemed to foreshadow conditions at Gateway in Hayward three years later: Staff could not contain the spread of the disease.

One inspection took place during a norovirus outbreak in the facility. An inspector checked the sanitizer level in the kitchen’s dishwasher and found it was five times lower than what was needed to kill the virus.

Federal reports on the flu and norovirus outbreaks don’t say how many patients were sickened, but the decision by the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to shutter Fircrest Convalesce­nt came within months. It remains closed.

Neither Antony Kekkek nor Prema Kekkek, a registered nurse, responded to repeated phone and email requests for an interview for this report.

The list of serious violations at Solorzano’s Orinda Care Center — where at least four people have died and 53 people have contracted the coronaviru­s — also is long, including an audit by the state that found it did not meet minimum staffing requiremen­ts on 16 out of 24 days that were monitored.

Last year, state inspectors found that dietary staff at the facility could not describe or demonstrat­e the correct procedures for sanitizing cookware and tableware, and that staff was storing expired and current medication­s together — sometimes without refrigerat­ing those that required it.

“We believe these were unacceptab­le, but isolated, incidents,” said a spokesman for Solorzano’s facilities, Dan Kramer. “We’re doing everything we can to ensure they won’t happen again.”

In December, the California Department of Public Health denied three applicatio­ns submitted by Solorzano to operate skilled nursing facilities in San Jose, Canoga Park and Glendora because inspectors found 97 federal regulatory violations in facilities she owned, managed or operated between October 2016 and October 2019, as well as 46 violations of state requiremen­ts and three administra­tive penalties for failing to meet minimum staffing requiremen­ts.

Among the deficienci­es the state cited in its denial to Solorzano were:

• A 2018 inspection at her San Bernardino facility that found staff failed to notify a doctor about injuries to patients, including a fall that left a resident with a fractured hip.

• An incident at Lake Merritt Healthcare Center in Oakland during which faulty exposed wiring burned the floor, leading to a power outage in three rooms and “the potential for fire.”

• The February 2019 sexual assault and rape of a Glendale facility resident inside her room by a nursing assistant.

• Other violations across multiple facilities, including a lack of sanitary precaution­s for food storage and bad pharmacy recordkeep­ing.

In the denial letters, state health officials also noted that Solorzano’s nursing home administra­tor license had been revoked because she provided fraudulent college transcript­s in applying for the license. Although the revocation means she cannot operate a facility as a licensed administra­tor, she can still own them.

Kramer contended that Solorzano’s administra­tor’s license was not revoked but rather the state sent the letter in error, noting that a hearing on the matter is scheduled for September. “This is about Ms. Solorzano’s due process rights and we plan to present informatio­n on or before that date fully exoneratin,” her, he said.

Solorzano appealed the denials of her facility applicatio­ns.

The number of positive COVID-19 cases at all of the facilities owned by Solorzano and the Thekkeks is unknown, but according to data published by the state department of health Saturday, Solorzano’s Orinda Care Center had 58 positive cases among staff and patients and her Redwood Healthcare Center in Oakland had between one and

11.

The data showed the Thekkeks’ Gateway with 33 staff and 69 patient infections, a jump from the 66 total figure Alameda County released Thursday. Officials did not respond to emailed questions Saturday.

But at Gateway, family members of patients described horrendous conditions even before the COVID-19 outbreak.

Deonn Morgan’s mother, Willie Ann Morgan, was first sent to Gateway about two years ago after she had a stroke and was unable to speak or walk on her own.

Morgan said that in the past, her father would sometimes visit her mother for three or four hours at a time without seeing a nurse or nursing assistant come into her room.

On March 25, a social worker told the family that Willie Ann Morgan was being moved into a room with other residents to make space for new patients.

“I said we do not want my mother moved from her room,” Deonn Morgan said, but the worker told them they had already moved her. “Then, three to four days later, Kaiser called us and said my mother was tested positive with coronaviru­s.”

As of Friday, she was in stable condition at a Kaiser hospital, Deonn Morgan said. But she said Kaiser coordinato­rs want to send her mother back to Gateway, which Deonn Morgan refuses to allow. “She can’t go back here — it needs to be off-limits from everyone.”

A Kaiser spokespers­on issued a statement that acknowledg­ed the “difficult situation” for patients and families.

“We are evaluating the latest developmen­ts in this evolving situation and are reviewing the care our patients receive, and will ensure our patients’ safety and well-being,” the spokespers­on said.

District Attorney Nancy O’malley said her office has been investigat­ing Gateway for its handling of the pandemic.

 ?? DOUG DURAN STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? A person is taken into the Gateway Care and Rehabilita­tion Center in Hayward on April 10. Records show Gateway had serious problems well before the pandemic.
DOUG DURAN STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER A person is taken into the Gateway Care and Rehabilita­tion Center in Hayward on April 10. Records show Gateway had serious problems well before the pandemic.

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